Garbz
No longer a newbie, moving up!
- Joined
- Oct 26, 2003
- Messages
- 9,713
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- 203
- Location
- Brisbane, Australia
- Website
- www.auer.garbz.com
- Can others edit my Photos
- Photos NOT OK to edit
you might want to also so that they have some idea of what they need to do to achieve the image you have.:hugs:
Pull magic out of your ass
Seriously though you need to think of fireworks in terms of how they are historically set up to know what to get. I would never take fireworks photos from this location for Riverfire for instance even through they are launched from the same place they are shot higher and higher into the air and the city wouldn't feature in them.
Basically with the fireworks I try to figure out where they are going to be. It's a guess. I get it wrong quite often and end up with boring photos. A wide angle lens helps, or you could take photos from far away. I don't remember the specific settings I used on that photo but I know roughly how I got there. Like I said earlier a typical firework shot lasts 2-5 seconds, so set your ISO / aperture to what you think will expose the background correctly at 2-5 seconds and then hope you got it right. It relies on lighting in the background being consistent with the fireworks. A photo like this would never work in a dark park for instance as any setup that exposes the background in 2-5 seconds would likely completely blow out the firework.