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Thread started 15 Nov 2006 (Wednesday) 13:21
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How do you take a photo of flame?

 
Raymond ­ Lin
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Nov 15, 2006 13:21 |  #1

I tried to take some photos of the gas fire in the kitchen today, may be a bit like this. Except the flame is never still, I was using manual, F/1.8, 1/60th and even 800ISO and it image was still coming out far too dark even with the kitchen light on. What I really want to do is an a photo of flames with a dark background, but any shutter speed lower than 1/250 makes the flames all blurr.......help.

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Lin-z
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Nov 15, 2006 13:54 |  #2

I would think you need a really fast shutter speed for that.


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unix04
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Nov 15, 2006 14:35 |  #3

you didnt mention spot metering, but if you have that option, try spot metering against the flame, max out your ISO setting. try to keep shutter above 250, and set aperture accordingly. depending on your lens, 1.8 will give you shallow DOF and might cause only one part of the flame to come out in focus...so stop down if you can.


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Raymond ­ Lin
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Nov 15, 2006 17:40 as a reply to  @ unix04's post |  #4

I have a 30D and a 50mm so I can do spot metering and F/1.8...will try it later.


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Raymond ­ Lin
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Nov 15, 2006 22:41 |  #5

ok, went against most things, realise no matter how fast I am going to shoot it, the flames is NEVER still from one split second to the next so I just wack the ISO to 100 and put the F/stop to F/5 and use spot metering and played with the time a little. Adjusted levels a little in PS.

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p.s. god I wish i had a cable release........

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Rumjungle
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Nov 15, 2006 23:01 |  #6

Hmm, I'd like to give that a try too. Here's what I did:

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Canon EOS 1D Mark II N, Canon EF 85mm f/1.8 USM
1/2s f/3.2 at 85.0mm iso100

It sure looks like we need to add some lighting of our own.

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StewartR
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Nov 16, 2006 07:58 |  #7

Raymond Lin wrote in post #2269744 (external link)
ok, went against most things, realise no matter how fast I am going to shoot it, the flames is NEVER still from one split second to the next so I just wack the ISO to 100 and put the F/stop to F/5 and use spot metering and played with the time a little. Adjusted levels a little in PS.

But forgot to crop out the 75% of the picture that is just black, apparently...:)


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deadpass
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Nov 16, 2006 20:58 |  #8

*looks at stove and curses it for being electric*


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lostdoggy
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Nov 16, 2006 21:06 |  #9

deadpass wrote in post #2274143 (external link)
*looks at stove and curses it for being electric*

There is always candles and oil lamps




  
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SkipD
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Nov 16, 2006 21:23 |  #10

Raymond Lin wrote in post #2269744 (external link)
ok, went against most things, realise no matter how fast I am going to shoot it, the flames is NEVER still from one split second to the next so I just wack the ISO to 100 and put the F/stop to F/5 and use spot metering and played with the time a little. Adjusted levels a little in PS.

A suggestion: You might get a little better result with your stove burner if you both clean the burner thoroughly and use some sort of "walls" (possibly made of cardboard) around the burner to keep air movement to a minimum. Air currents in the room can blow the flames all over the place.


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How do you take a photo of flame?
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