I was on the blacony of the Tower Lounge in the Contemporary Resort last week ("14th" floor concierge lounge) watching the lightening behind Space Mountain. This was one of my favorite shots:
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I had to crop out the left side because there was a very bright light pointing directly my way.
AWESOME shot!!!!![]()
nice shot...would have hated being on space mt at that moment though. when i was cameraless lightening hit somewhere nearby( smelled a kind of burning rubber smell but never could find where it hit) and it was so loud i about jumped out of my skin.I was on the blacony of the Tower Lounge in the Contemporary Resort last week ("14th" floor concierge lounge) watching the lightening behind Space Mountain. This was one of my favorite shots:
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I had to crop out the left side because there was a very bright light pointing directly my way.
nice shot...would have hated being on space mt at that moment though. when i was cameraless lightening hit somewhere nearby( smelled a kind of burning rubber smell but never could find where it hit) and it was so loud i about jumped out of my skin.![]()
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I was wondering how most people manage to get pictures of lightning strikes? do you just keep taking pics hoping for one to hit ? or a fast trigger finger? have always been curious how to get one![]()
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Wow I love everyone's pictures!!
This is right before a tornado hit in chicago at 3 pm last september
Things like this never happen in chicago, so everyone was so scared and lost haha.
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I was wondering how most people manage to get pictures of lightning strikes? do you just keep taking pics hoping for one to hit ? or a fast trigger finger? have always been curious how to get one![]()
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I was wondering that myself yesterday when we were at the beach and a great thunderstorm rolled in. Took a ton of pics but didn't catch one lightning bolt. Here's some pics without lightning.No one has a fast enough trigger finger. You just have to set your camera up and keep shooting. It works best when it is a real storm with lots of strikes rather than an occasional strike. You also don't want too long of an exposure because with a long exposure the strike won't show up unless it comes at the end of the exposure. The one I shot was at f/5.0 for 6 seconds. The strike came toward the end of the exposure. If you notice the lit up area in the clouds, there was alot going on up there but it ended up just being light, not a bolt.