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Covering eyepiece for long exposures

SHUTTERHIVE

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I love taking long exposure shots, It is by far my favourite thing to do especially when I am at the beach. Most people will tell you that you need to cover the eyepiece when taking a long exposure on a DSLR. I personally have never really bothered and have never noticed any fogging or light leaking because of it. What do others think? Do we really need to cover our eyepiece when shooting long exposures on a DSLR?
 
Take a long exposure shot in a low light situation and then come back and tell us that you didn't notice anything. Mid-day....not a huge issue, nighttime...and an open viewfinder may very well trash you capture. You will have a bright, funky band across the bottom third of your picture.
 
Take a long exposure shot in a low light situation and then come back and tell us that you didn't notice anything. Mid-day....not a huge issue, nighttime...and an open viewfinder may very well trash you capture. You will have a bright, funky band across the bottom third of your picture.

I have taken plenty of low light long exposures and never had an issue
 
longer exposure to get the water movement taken during morning when light was behind the camera going into the viewfinder.

Notice any purple haze ?
PurpleHaze-1a.webp
 
Wow, I have never seen this with digital photography, this shot was a 10 minute exposure with the sun coming up behind me without covering the eyepiece...

b0f344_67e8fa6f1cfe4d4ba7dc9356e0e55e4d~mv2.jpg
 
In the old days camera had a little switch next to the viewfinder to close a shutter (found on D700, D8x0 and above, D300/500, etc).

When I got my d7000 (and d600, d750) I went out early one morning to take a bunch of pictures of moving water at various places. And most of my images were junk due to light coming in the viewfinder as shown above. I then recalled about the viewfinder shutter> I simply use the strap to cover the viewfinder to resolve it mostly.
 
I wonder if Canon closes out the viewfinder area vs Nikon during a longer exposure ?

You can test it by just shooting a flashlight into the viewfinder briefly during a short test.
 
I wonder if Canon closes out the viewfinder area vs Nikon during a longer exposure ?

You can test it by just shooting a flashlight into the viewfinder briefly during a short test.

I don't think they do considering they still have a cover on the neck strap provided
 
Don't Believe Everything You Think: The 6 Basic Mistakes We Make in Thinking

The main mirror of a DSLR has to be up against the bottom of the viewfinder to make a photo or to shoot video. The main mirror is not designed to form a light tight seal with the bottom of the viewfinder. Consequently, light can get into the mirror box area of the camera that is in front on the image sensor adding light to a long exposure.

Nikon includes a viewfinder cover (DK-5) with every new DSLR camera Nikon sells.
It's small and many people have no idea what the DK-5 is for, and/or promtly lose the DK-5.
I don't know if Canon provides anything like the DK-5.

The bottom line is, if you don't cover the viewfinder during a long exposure you could get some unwanted light during the exposure from the viewfinder. YMMV
 
I don't have the eyepiece covers. I just put my thick micro-fiber towel over the back.
 

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