Gday guys, im looking at taking a few photos of the fire works in Melbourne tonight and as im still learning i was wondering if anyone could help me out with which setting to use. I will be using a Nikon D90. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Gday guys, im looking at taking a few photos of the fire works in Melbourne tonight and as im still learning i was wondering if anyone could help me out with which setting to use. I will be using a Nikon D90. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Here ya go. Have a read of this. It should help you .
http://photojojo.com/content/guides/...eworks-photos/
http://www.nyip.com/ezine/holidays/firewks.html
Cheers Peter
Canon 7D...Canon 40D...Canon 24-70L 2.8...Canon 70-200L 2.8...Canon 17-85...Canon 50mm...Speedlights....Tripods...Filters... Battery grips.... And heaps of other stuff
There are always two people in every picture.. the photographer and the viewer.
It is quite hard. i tried a few months ago and one of the things i learnt was sometimes the same camera settings would be spot on and other times too bright or dark. depends on exactly which fireworks had expoded. i think mine were exposing for about 3 secs and they turned out ok.
you can take a look at the exif at:
http://johncat.smugmug.com/Events/Sy...24987767_aCs6R
depends on how close you are as well.
Have your preview on so you can see if they are turning out quickly.
sometimes the smoke will ruin shots later on in the sequence. again pot luck!
boggo.
feel free to fix my shots and send them back to me!
canon 5d2
General rules of thumb:
* Place yourself up-wind of the fireworks.
* Use a wide angle lens
* use your lowest iso setting (100 on Canon's, 200 on most Nikons)
* stop down to between f/8 and f/11
* use a tripod and cable release
* expose for approx. 2 to 30 secs depending on frequency and brightness of the fireworks.
* If there are city lights, try to get them in as a compositional element as fireworks on their own tend to get boring very fast.
There are a few exceptions to this, for instance the Brisbane Riverfire fireworks usually have a single decent shot available and it's usually about a 1 min exposure.
Dave
http://www.degrootphotography.com.au/
Canon EOS 1D MkIV | Canon EOS 5D MkII | Canon EOS 30D | Canon EF 400mm f/5.6L USM | Canon EF 70-200mm f/2.8L IS USM | Canon EF 17-40mm f/4L USM | Canon EF 85mm f/1.2L II USM | Canon EF 35mm f/1.4L USM | Canon TS-E 17mm f/4L & some non-L lenses.
There you go, Dave has given it to you in a nutshell. If you don't have a cable release you could (Just) use the self portrait setting, but it would be slow and you would only be able to take a shot every 10 seconds or so. Probably better at this late juncture to go along and suss out good spots for next year - fireworks shots need a fair bit of planning.
Odille
“Can't keep my eyes from the circling sky”
My Blog | Canon 1DsMkII | 60D | Tokina 20-35mm f/2.8 AF AT-X PRO | EF50mm f/1.8| Sigma 150-500mm F5-6.3 APO DG OS HSM | Fujifilm X-T1 & X-M1 | Fujinon XC 16-50mm F3.5-5.6 OIS | Fujinon XC 50-230mm F3.5-5.6 OIS | Fujinon XF 18-55mm F2.8-4R LM OIS | tripods, flashes, filters etc ||
Thanks heaps. Hopefully i get the chance to take a few tonight.
weather isn't looking to good in melbourne as i am writing this.. looking at the BoM website, there a huge mass of clouds heading our way
Hi, was going to do the same thing as well, but severe thunderstorms, rain, high winds and hail about to hit Melbourne around 9:30pm tonight !
if thunderstorms continue ... the Fireworks might be cancelled as well.
maybe instead try to capture the lightening. but be careful out there.
Cheers
Robert
Not looking real good for the Melbourne fireworks tonight. Heaps of lightning on its way
yeah.. was on my way but decided to go back as it's pouring out there.. but looking at the BoM again, the midnight fireworks might be OK..
Hopefully by midnight it will be ok.............. but I dought it
Just watched the Sydney 9pm ones. They were unbelievable.
+1 on Dave and Joosts advice above .. heres a couple of examples from NYE in Sydney last year (2008)
Hi Im Darren
www.darrengrayphotography.com
SONY A850 (FF)] + GRIP | SONY A350 (APS-C) + GRIP | SONY NEX-5 +16 2.8 + 18-55 E-MOUNT LENSES | CZ 85 1.4 | 50 1.4 | 28-75 2.8 | 70-200 2.8 | 2 x 42AMs | 24" imac | LR | CS4 | + loads of other junk
bigdazzler
I think you have a very good collection of images there, good color, focus and composition in some is excellent
I stuffed my fireworks last night a lot, played with street shots and forgot to reset my exposure time to 2.5-3 seconds
all I have is smoke and some light
good news is,
there is a chance on 26th this month
going to the City aiming for big picture on Sydney Harbour
Happy NEW YEAR everyone !
linuxgear
Nice shots Darren, especially #4. Hope you had a great night as well.
Wow Darren, those pics are great. I was so dissapointed that I was not able to get any decent pictures this year! Maybe next year....a full year to learn.
Yep and one more tip some great results if you open shutter from when you first see it take off and then release once exploded.
as with this one
Newbie to the world of Digital Gear: Nikon D60 - 18-55mm - 55 - 200mm - SB400 - New Sigma 10-20mm
http://www.flickr.com/photos/vk5mmm
Good to see people benefited from my post
Nice shots all round!
Slight alternative method to what has been proposed above. Go with the low ISO, aperture of f8-f11 and long exposure time. If you want to avoid the trails take along something black. Hold it in front of the lens when it opens, remove it when the fireworks explode and you get what you want and then replace the black in front of the lens. CAn work extremely well for multiple starbursts close together when removing and replacing the black obstruction.
I'm sorry if this was mentioned in the links provided by bigbikes. Without knowing what your equipment is may I also suggest using the bulb mode if you have it as this works extremely well.
Daz it might help if you provided settings to your images also unless they are the same as Dave suggested and then specify SS