Capture: Two Tripods, One Night
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Singapore, 2011. Marina Bay Sands.
Stop the lens down to f16 or f22 if possible, for maximum sharpness and the greatest depth of field.
He's right you know. Although the more observant amongst you will note my settings aren't quite as prescribed. On the night I let the camera make decisions for me, and being limited to 30sec maximum exposures, it dropped the f/ settings, when I should have increased the ASA.
Still, I'm also partial to a little blur, so I'll say I meant to do it. ;-)
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Aaarrhhh..... the loveliness of night! That time of silky shadows, shimmmering reflections, dingy corners and sparkling highlights - all captured so beautifully here! My night photography tends to be a much more amateurish affair - often a blurry (but pretty) abstraction of light and dark. I tell myself that's fine, that the photo has 'mood' and atmosphere but really, that's just a cover for my ineptitude. I'll post an example later so you can see for yourseldf. Having confessed, I may as well front up with some crappy but pretty images :-)
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Sacha, in reply to
wow
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Wow, love all the night shots! And particularly your one with the mast shadows on the water, Jackson. And Adrienne, your beautiful shots of vanished places.
Sadly, all my night shots are on my other computer which is not internet-capable just now, so I’ll have to admire everyone else’s.
But tripods are totally awesome; I’ve got so much use out of mine. Failing that, any reasonably-flat surface can serve, as Jonathan says. And a cable-release/remote control or self-timer also helps minimise movement.
If none of these is available, I have gotten away with exposures of a few seconds by putting the camera-strap round my neck, holding the camera out with both hands so the strap is pulled taut, elbows braced against my sides, and leaning against a wall or other solid support. And not breathing until the exposure is done. :-)
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Ah, I now understand what Silo Park is for (apart from causing children to injure themselves horribly on the least safe playground of all time)!
(I went there for the first time on Wednesday with Ben and Giovanni, and gazed in wonderment upon various bizarre, useless, or actively dangerous structures. What a weird place.)
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Fantastic shots, guys. What an awesome industrial strength park!
Long Gully Bridge, Northbridge, Sydney. One of the few times I've dragged the tripod out after dark.
Love Lilith's advice too.
And not breathing until the exposure is done. :-)
Hehe, I've tried that, I think I shake more when I am not breathing!
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3410,
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David Hood, in reply to
I’ve tried that, I think I shake more when I am not breathing!
The advice I've seen is take the picture while exhaling, on the theory your body is in a more relaxed state than tensed up with not breathing.
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Lilith __, in reply to
I think I shake more when I am not breathing!
There's a natural pause at the end of exhaling, I just stretch it out a bit. Works for me! :-)
That's one crazy-looking bridge, Julie. (Arrow-slits!!)
David, love your scary trees.
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JacksonP, in reply to
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Ian Dalziel, in reply to
trees a crowd...
Floodlit trees ... one winter’s night ...
There is a horror omnibus
out there waiting for this
freezing frisson of a fractal
for its cover......actually Martin Phillipps (Chills) does
a good line in modern horror stories
and I believe is responsible for this image...
which I'll call "One Tripod, One Night..."
:- )( thanks to the fine poster archiving of TallyHo )
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Adrienne Rewi, in reply to
I LIKE this approach! Spontaneous, devil-may-care, leaping on luck...... very me. And here's where I confess I've never lugged a tripod out at night ever! In fact, I only bought one recently because my eyesight is failing and *everything* is going blurry. Thought a tripod might steady things a bit. But it's such a bitch of a thing to operate. (Oops! Are we allowed to swear on here?). Have fallen over it's legs twice. We have an uneasy relationship - and, I suspect, an unsteady one, so it may yet be shoved in the cupboard if it doesn't perform better.
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Jos,
Great shots Jack! Tripod for the win!
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JacksonP, in reply to
Sadly, all my night shots are on my other computer which is not internet-capable just now, so I’ll have to admire everyone else’s.
Any chance of dumping them on a memory stick, or something? Would be lovely if you could contribute some shots too. ;-)
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