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Thread started 29 Jun 2012 (Friday) 22:13
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7D night shots

 
DanFrank
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Jun 29, 2012 22:13 |  #1

Im having a difficult time taking any sort of night shot and getting good quality out of it. If Im walking around a bar area, or looking down a street, seems to be very blurry. Im not using a tripod, but was curious what kind of nights shots can be had NOT using a tripod? And how you might have obtained those shots? Post a pic........


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OneJZsupra
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Jun 29, 2012 22:20 |  #2

Well um... Are you shooting in Auto? Are you using a stablizied lens? (Which helps for camera movement, NOT the motion of subjects with in the frame) How much light are you shooting in? Why can't you use a tripod? What is the goal of your night time photographs? what settings are you using?

Are you going for something like this?

IMAGE: http://www.christopherrhoadsphotography.com/Landscapes/Landscapes/i-7vSnPwf/0/M/IMG0131-M.jpg
IMAGE LINK: http://www.christopher​rhoadsphotography.com …634299&k=7vSnPw​f&lb=1&s=A  (external link)
7D + 16-35 II 25s F/14 at ISO 100

Because I pretty much always use a tripod for anything related to night-time photography.....


Can you post an example of the photos showing the problems you are having?

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DanFrank
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Jun 29, 2012 22:34 |  #3

seoul4korea wrote in post #14651289 (external link)
Well um... Are you shooting in Auto? Are you using a stablizied lens? (Which helps for camera movement, NOT the motion of subjects with in the frame) How much light are you shooting in? Why can't you use a tripod? What is the goal of your night time photographs? what settings are you using?

Are you going for something like this?
QUOTED IMAGE
IMAGE LINK: http://www.christopher​rhoadsphotography.com …634299&k=7vSnPw​f&lb=1&s=A  (external link)
7D + 16-35 II 25s F/14 at ISO 100

Because I pretty much always use a tripod for anything related to night-time photography.....


Can you post an example of the photos showing the problems you are having?

I'm not oppose to a tripod, I have one being delivered tomarrow that I purchased a few days ago. Just since I've been waiting, I'm trying to get something decent by hand and im
Finding it very difficult. Using 7D & 15-85mm f/3.5-5.6 IS


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Cozmocha
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Jun 29, 2012 22:37 |  #4

If you plan on talking photos of people at low light a tripod wont help much because the people will move. Flash is about the only way to go about it.


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OneJZsupra
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Jun 29, 2012 22:38 |  #5

Cozmocha wrote in post #14651367 (external link)
If you plan on talking photos of people at low light a tripod wont help much because the people will move. Flash is about the only way to go about it.

Agree, tripods are for city scapes and landscapes, anything with extended exposure.

Could you answer some of my questions so you can get further help?


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DanFrank
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Jun 29, 2012 22:59 |  #6

Shooting manual. IS on lens is on. City scapes, still night scenes is what I'm looking to shoot. I'm getting a tripod tomarrow. Not much light at all is availible. Mostly after sunset & into the night.


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rrblint
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Jun 29, 2012 23:10 as a reply to  @ DanFrank's post |  #7

Have you tried bumping the ISO up a bit say to 3200 or 6400?...It might help until you get your tripod...A faster lens would also help.


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rick_reno
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Jun 29, 2012 23:38 |  #8

rrblint wrote in post #14651481 (external link)
Have you tried bumping the ISO up a bit say to 3200 or 6400?...It might help until you get your tripod...A faster lens would also help.

thats what i do. 3200 works pretty good.

Teamspeed has written up a good bit of into on high ISO with the 7D.

https://photography-on-the.net …/showthread.php​?t=1079217




  
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artyman
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Jun 30, 2012 03:22 |  #9

In the absence of a tripod use a wall or seat, anything that will keep the camera still if using long shutter times, else use a sensible speed and up the ISO and open the aperture to compensate.


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John ­ from ­ PA
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Jun 30, 2012 07:33 |  #10

Something that might be helpful...back in film days many of us had a Jiffy Night Scene calculator first published by Popular Photography in the mid-1980's. The "New Jiffy Exposure Calculator" is more suited for digital cameras. Use the link to download the PDF, then print, cut out as indicated, assemble, and throw it in to the camera bag. It is a great starting point for night time exposures. But remember to bracket.

http://www.stacken.kth​.se/~maxz/files/jiffy.​pdf (external link)




  
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msowsun
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Jun 30, 2012 08:00 |  #11

Here is what I do for a quick night shot:

Use ISO 3200, use Av mode set to your widest aperture, dial in -1 or -2 Exposure Compensation, and then shoot with the camera braced against something.

If you don't use -1 or - 2 EC the camera will think the scene should look like bright daylight and overexpose the night scene.


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Charlie
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Jun 30, 2012 08:06 |  #12

If you are shooting people, 1/30, f2.8, iso1600, popular flash maybe dialed down a little. I remember shooting Halloween in Hollywood with these settings, and photos came out pretty well.


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OneJZsupra
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Jun 30, 2012 08:54 |  #13

DanFrank wrote in post #14651441 (external link)
Shooting manual. IS on lens is on. City scapes, still night scenes is what I'm looking to shoot. I'm getting a tripod tomarrow. Not much light at all is availible. Mostly after sunset & into the night.

Since you are getting a tripod tomorrow that should solve all of your problems. Just make sure when you mount it you turn off IS


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7D night shots
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