Is it possible with the 400D to have multiple exposure on same frame/shot. We used to enjoy this with film Cameras and do a lot of trocks with it.
If yes, how?
aymanmb Senior Member 296 posts Joined Jan 2007 More info | Sep 30, 2007 04:24 | #1 Is it possible with the 400D to have multiple exposure on same frame/shot. We used to enjoy this with film Cameras and do a lot of trocks with it. Canon 50D | EF-S 17-55 f/2.8 IS | EF-S 55-250 IS | EF 50mm 1.8 | BG-E2N Battery Grip | 580EX II
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*Sonic* Senior Member 348 posts Joined Feb 2007 Location: UK More info | Sep 30, 2007 05:00 | #2 I asked this question some time back on another forum, and I think the answer was to just use Photoshop or similar Canon 30D
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RiffRaff Goldmember 1,111 posts Likes: 1 Joined Mar 2007 Location: Austin, Texas, USA More info | Here's a Sports Shooter article about using multiple exposures on a Nikon D2X, I believe: Shawn McHorse - Shawn.McHorse.com
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FotOz Senior Member 932 posts Likes: 3 Joined Jul 2005 Location: Down under. More info | Sep 30, 2007 05:50 | #4 Don't know about the 400D, but I know the 300 and 350 won't allow multis. Sensor isn't designed for it. I do multi's by shooting off a tripod, then Photoshopping the finals - something like these! . . . Steve . . .
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SoloDallas Member 215 posts Joined Sep 2007 Location: Rome, Italy More info | Sep 30, 2007 05:59 | #5 I think it's called bracketing. I have different cameras than yours which will allow for bracketing (and several types of it) but simulating bracketing as the poster above is a well known practice. Canon 1D MkIV | Canon 5D MkII | 17-40 f/4L| 50mm f/1.2L | 24-105 f/4L | 70-200 f/2.8L IS | 580EX II Speedlite | 100 Macro II f/2.8L
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FotOz Senior Member 932 posts Likes: 3 Joined Jul 2005 Location: Down under. More info | Sep 30, 2007 06:44 | #6 SoloDallas wrote in post #4035312 I think it's called bracketing. I have different cameras than yours which will allow for bracketing (and several types of it) but simulating bracketing as the poster above is a well known practice. If I am not wrong, you take the same shot quickly underxposing and overexposing one or more stops below and above. Gotta be quick in changing the exposition if you don't have a built in bracketing function (which will shoot three expositions with one click). No bracketing involved in these shots (although my cameras will do that.) These are just the combinations of a repetition of shots, being careful where the subjects are in each one. In the top example for instance, I used the first shot with the B&G in the centre as my main. I then tightly cropped and cut the B&G out of my second shot and pasted them to the first. Then tightly cropped and cut the B&G from the third shot and also pasted that to the first. This gave me a three layered shot. After I had zoomed in and accurately aligned the 2 added layers I merged them and there you are. Nothing magic, just fun. The B&G loved them. . . . Steve . . .
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SoloDallas Member 215 posts Joined Sep 2007 Location: Rome, Italy More info | Sep 30, 2007 07:27 | #7 Yes FotOz, I hand understood your technique and liked it lots, too! Canon 1D MkIV | Canon 5D MkII | 17-40 f/4L| 50mm f/1.2L | 24-105 f/4L | 70-200 f/2.8L IS | 580EX II Speedlite | 100 Macro II f/2.8L
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rangersvtsplash Senior Member 634 posts Joined May 2003 More info | 40d do this? or even have like panarama feature? Canon EOS 40D + BG-E2 Zoom Lens EF-S 17-85mm 1:4-5.6 IS USM with EW-71B Hood, 50mm f1.8 II.
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Sep 30, 2007 08:00 | #9 aymanmb, Here is a photo of only 1 TV but changed the channel and repositioned my tripod before each time I took the lens cap off Mult Exposure TVclick for specsIMAGE LINK: http://johnbdigital.com …l_beauty/multi_tv_exp.htm So it is kind of possible ![]() Sony A6400, A6500, Apeman A80, & a bunch of Lenses.............
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racingsafetyman Member 220 posts Joined Jul 2006 Location: Northants, UK More info | Sep 30, 2007 09:35 | #10 SoloDallas wrote in post #4035312 I think it's called bracketing. I have different cameras than yours which will allow for bracketing (and several types of it) but simulating bracketing as the poster above is a well known practice. If I am not wrong, you take the same shot quickly underxposing and overexposing one or more stops below and above. Gotta be quick in changing the exposition if you don't have a built in bracketing function (which will shoot three expositions with one click). Bracketing AEB will not take three shots with one click, it requires you to press the shutter three times, one at "correct" exposure, then one under and one over-exposed by however many stops you have set it to. Colin
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SoloDallas Member 215 posts Joined Sep 2007 Location: Rome, Italy More info | Sep 30, 2007 09:37 | #11 racingsafetyman wrote in post #4035970 Bracketing AEB will not take three shots with one click, it requires you to press the shutter three times, one at "correct" exposure, then one under and one over-exposed by however many stops you have set it to.
Canon 1D MkIV | Canon 5D MkII | 17-40 f/4L| 50mm f/1.2L | 24-105 f/4L | 70-200 f/2.8L IS | 580EX II Speedlite | 100 Macro II f/2.8L
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Hermeto Cream of the Crop 6,674 posts Likes: 2 Joined Oct 2005 Location: Toronto, Canada More info | Sep 30, 2007 09:40 | #12 Permanent banracingsafetyman wrote in post #4035970 Bracketing AEB will not take three shots with one click, it requires you to press the shutter three times, one at "correct" exposure, then one under and one over-exposed by however many stops you have set it to. Only if Drive mode is set to Single shooting. What we see depends mainly on what we look for.
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*Sonic* Senior Member 348 posts Joined Feb 2007 Location: UK More info | Sep 30, 2007 12:43 | #13 Hermeto wrote in post #4035992 Only if Drive mode is set to Single shooting. With Continuous shooting, you have to press shutter button only once and keep it pressed until all 3 shots are fired. (Pg. 91, EOS 350D Instruction Manual) # Canon 30D
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racingsafetyman Member 220 posts Joined Jul 2006 Location: Northants, UK More info | Sep 30, 2007 14:07 | #14 Hermeto wrote in post #4035992 Only if Drive mode is set to Single shooting. With Continuous shooting, you have to press shutter button only once and keep it pressed until all 3 shots are fired. (Pg. 91, EOS 350D Instruction Manual) OK, that's cool I didn't know that Colin
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Sageg Senior Member 521 posts Joined Oct 2005 Location: Montreal More info | Sep 30, 2007 14:14 | #15 I'm pretty sure some of the Nikon dSLRS can do multiple exposures. I've seen some really interesting abstract done using this technique and a Nikon. Sarah
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