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PAS Photography
3rd of October 2006 (Tue), 14:49
Heres some Lightning shots from the huge frontal system that moved thru Wi and IL last night. Pretty spectacular light show and had there not been so much rain I could have got more Cloud to ground strikes but Im happy with what I captured this late in the year. C&C welcome.
I have a ton of lightning on my website if your interested is seeing more photos at http://www.pasphotography.com/portfolio/lightning.html

http://www.pasphotography.com/images/600_A_MG_7887_filtered_copy.jpg

http://www.pasphotography.com/images/600_A_MG_7893_filtered_copy.jpg

http://www.pasphotography.com/images/600_A_MG_7904_filtered_copy.jpg

The First 3 are uncropped. The last image is cropped about 50%.

http://www.pasphotography.com/images/600_A_MG_7890_filtered_copy.jpg

Paul

Frank_Hollahan
3rd of October 2006 (Tue), 14:51
Great looking lightening shots Paul but looks a little over sharpened to me.

PAS Photography
3rd of October 2006 (Tue), 14:55
Just did a slight unsharpenmask and despeckle after running Noise Ninja. Could be in the compression and saving to my website. It seems to do that to all my images.

Thanks,

Paul

Dimitri_V
3rd of October 2006 (Tue), 15:03
Very impressive lightning but i agree with Frank.

Digitally_Altered
3rd of October 2006 (Tue), 15:20
pretty cool, looks like it starts down, then heads back up and sideways...

R Hardman
3rd of October 2006 (Tue), 19:46
Could be in the compression and saving to my website. It seems to do that to all my images.

I think I would be looking for another way. Nice lightning shots!

HighPlainsPhotographer
3rd of October 2006 (Tue), 20:12
Impressive lightning shots.

Shaun

xtravaluemeal1
3rd of October 2006 (Tue), 20:13
haha..the fact that you were able to get pics in that storm..impressive. I was out there near shedd aquarium and was nearly blown into Lake Michigan! The worst thing was that I didn't even get a shot of lightening! The sacrifices we make! Sogging wet, wet car seats, zero pictures..priceless!

Curtis N
3rd of October 2006 (Tue), 22:01
Some day I'm gonna try that. Neat stuff!

JaGWiRE
4th of October 2006 (Wed), 06:34
I tried capturing some through my window this morning but the lightning idsspaeraed as soon as I began shooting :(.

How do you shoot it? Through a window or something? I'de go outside, but I'm scared of rain :\.

Curtis N
4th of October 2006 (Wed), 08:40
I'm not afraid of rain, but the combination of lightning and a big aluminum tripod is certainly cause for concern.

JaGWiRE
4th of October 2006 (Wed), 10:56
I'm not afraid of rain, but the combination of lightning and a big aluminum tripod is certainly cause for concern.
my pod is alu :\
what about the fact my gear isn't weather sealed. Won't rain damage it? How can I shoot lightning w/o my tripod? I realise I need to use slow shutter speeds.

Curtis N
4th of October 2006 (Wed), 11:06
I think the usual approach to catch lightning at night is to take continuous 30 second exposures or use a remote and hold the button down until something happens, then release. This method will give you blurry pictures without a tripod.

It's hard to react quicly enough to take a shot when you see the lightning.

JaGWiRE
4th of October 2006 (Wed), 11:12
I think the usual approach to catch lightning at night is to take continuous 30 second exposures or use a remote and hold the button down until something happens, then release. This method will give you blurry pictures without a tripod.

It's hard to react quicly enough to take a shot when you see the lightning.


I think 30 second exposures should do the trick, no?

Curtis N
4th of October 2006 (Wed), 12:37
I think 30 second exposures should do the trick, no?I've never tried it, but I know it can be done that way.

PAS Photography
4th of October 2006 (Wed), 21:02
I use to use set exposures before I got a shutter release. Depending on the amount of lightning is how you set your shutter lengeth and how many bolts you want per photo. The shoter your exposure the less noise you will have tho. I have some more images that will top the previous ones once i get them uplaoedd from this morning on the way to Kewannee IL. This storm this a.m. was even larger moving thru the Quad City area. I even did a few hand held thru an open jeep windowsince it was raining.
If you dont have any lights in the desired image you can hand hold and get lightning fairly decent, otherwise a tripod is a must. For most storms a 15-30 second exposure does fine typically around f9 to f11 depending on distance from the bolts of lightning. ISO for me is always 100, or 200 for father away storms. I rarely use 400 because there is too much noise for my taste and wanting clear longer exposures.

Thanks for the comments everyone. -new mutli-strike images coming soon.

Paul

PAS Photography
4th of October 2006 (Wed), 22:16
Here are a few images from this a.m. on my way to work. I stopped for 5 mins at two different spots. I captured 32 decent shots in that short of time frame. The storm front was huge averaging 5 to 6 huge strikes per minute. The farm house in a few shows how large these lightning bolts were.
If only I had the whole hour to shoot I could have gotten well over a hundred photos. Id tell everyone all my secrets but I am finishing up an article to a couple Photography magazines in hopes of betting images and an article published.

http://www.pasphotography.com/images/600_A_MG_8037_copy.jpg

http://www.pasphotography.com/images/600_A_MG_8036_copy.jpg

http://www.pasphotography.com/images/600_A_MG_8028_copy.jpg

http://www.pasphotography.com/images/600_A_MG_8021_copy.jpg

Thanks again hope you enjoy the photos.
Paul

Curtis N
5th of October 2006 (Thu), 07:11
Good luck with the articles, Paul. Be sure to let us know when they're published!

zacker
5th of October 2006 (Thu), 07:38
awesome shots!

PAS Photography
11th of October 2006 (Wed), 20:29
Thanks, Looks like the article is on hold til May. Backlog of articles to the two magazines I submitted too but very interested.

asolie
12th of October 2006 (Thu), 00:51
:shock: How on earth did you get so many good shots?! All my shots are too dark, or too bright or none at all. Good job!

JaGWiRE
12th of October 2006 (Thu), 08:47
:shock: How on earth did you get so many good shots?! All my shots are too dark, or too bright or none at all. Good job!

Yeah, what do you meter off of in the middle of the night?

PAS Photography
12th of October 2006 (Thu), 10:21
It all comes from practice !!! My first few images came out blown out or so dark you couldnt see anything. Once you get the hang of it it comes natural to guess within a stop or two. The tricky part is guessing where the lightning will be at so you know to adjust your settings as the storm moves. By next year I should have a chart compiled from all of my data to give you more exact settings. The hard part is when a bolt of lightning pulses once versus pulsing 8 or 9 times is where you get blown out photos. The key is a shutter release cable. Set you camera to ISO 100, f9 thru f11 depending on distance of lightning, and actuate the shutter open, leaving it open for no longer than 25 sec. if no lightning was present. IF lightning does strike close the shutter imediately so you get less noise on the image, Unless you want a muliple strike image and the lightning is close enough apart.
If the storm is too far away you have to drop ISO to 200 or 400. If you have to go to 400 you are too far away and should move closer or wait if you are in the path of the lightning.

Thanks everyone for looking and commenting at my photos,

Paul

more lightning images here http://www.pasphotography.com/portfolio/lightning.html

JaGWiRE
12th of October 2006 (Thu), 10:57
It all comes from practice !!! My first few images came out blown out or so dark you couldnt see anything. Once you get the hang of it it comes natural to guess within a stop or two. The tricky part is guessing where the lightning will be at so you know to adjust your settings as the storm moves. By next year I should have a chart compiled from all of my data to give you more exact settings. The hard part is when a bolt of lightning pulses once versus pulsing 8 or 9 times is where you get blown out photos. The key is a shutter release cable. Set you camera to ISO 100, f9 thru f11 depending on distance of lightning, and actuate the shutter open, leaving it open for no longer than 25 sec. if no lightning was present. IF lightning does strike close the shutter imediately so you get less noise on the image, Unless you want a muliple strike image and the lightning is close enough apart.
If the storm is too far away you have to drop ISO to 200 or 400. If you have to go to 400 you are too far away and should move closer or wait if you are in the path of the lightning.

Thanks everyone for looking and commenting at my photos,

Paul

more lightning images here http://www.pasphotography.com/portfolio/lightning.html

So you shoot these outdoors with your cameras? I'm scared about water, aren't you worried about rain? Is a carbon fiber tripod a necessary? I have an alu tripod, but I guess that'de be a lightning risk?

PAS Photography
13th of October 2006 (Fri), 20:50
Yeah , I shoot outdoors as the storm rolls in and once it starts to rain I go inside. I can shoot out my sliding glass door which faces west, and then as the storm passes over I switch to shoot out the garage facing east. It works out well being under the roof overhangwhile its raining.
I even used a plasitic bag covering my whole camera except for the end of the lens for light rain/sprinkles. Having a shutter release cable you dont need to touch the camera so you can completely cover/protect it.
As far as tripods... theres larger things that are metal sticking up and if lighting should strike Id think it would go to them first. As with any extreme sport or activity... "If your not living on the edge your taking up too much space!" If you want good images it pays to go the extra mile to get them.

Paul

JaGWiRE
13th of October 2006 (Fri), 20:59
Yeah , I shoot outdoors as the storm rolls in and once it starts to rain I go inside. I can shoot out my sliding glass door which faces west, and then as the storm passes over I switch to shoot out the garage facing east. It works out well being under the roof overhangwhile its raining.
I even used a plasitic bag covering my whole camera except for the end of the lens for light rain/sprinkles. Having a shutter release cable you dont need to touch the camera so you can completely cover/protect it.
As far as tripods... theres larger things that are metal sticking up and if lighting should strike Id think it would go to them first. As with any extreme sport or activity... "If your not living on the edge your taking up too much space!" If you want good images it pays to go the extra mile to get them.

Paul

And get struck by lightning :D.

PAS Photography
15th of October 2006 (Sun), 02:16
haha, well thats not the goal. Statistically you have a better chance of getting killed by 100,000 other ways, I figure if I make it thru 99,999 other ways, Id be doing OK. Honestly I am very safe in how I photograph storms. Usually when the heart of the storm is upon you the rain and wind is too intense to get good images I stop. Once the eye of the Storm has passed I resume with my work. If its raining too hard you dont get as good images. The rain tends to create noise in the photos, plus your gear is in danger and I dont have $$ to replace camera equipment from water damage. A little sprinkle isnt going to hurt a camera if its protected. I barely get wet when shoot photos with an umbrella and camera protection. The tripod legs/feet is all that gets wet typically. The best photos are of the approaching storm and the images from a distance of the leading edge storm front. I keep a few of the weather channels active on my pc and tv while im shooting to achieve the best angle. A good feel for how storms move... like sniffing dirt ( Twister movie ) are a key too. Next year I plan on chasing some Tornados in Kansas to get the Ultimate Storm images.
I guess once you start getting good images you cant get enough. I have acouple photographers here that have seen my work printed in large format and are hooked now after a couple of storms and feel the rush of getting what most can not accomplish.