What are the best tips for this type of photography, in the knowledge that:
A) I have really limited experience of doing sunset/sunrise photography
B) The type of filters I would need for, if I needed them
RichSoansPhotos Cream of the Crop 5,981 posts Likes: 44 Joined Aug 2007 Location: London, UK More info | May 31, 2009 01:25 | #1 Permanent banWhat are the best tips for this type of photography, in the knowledge that:
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JHunter Senior Member 313 posts Joined Mar 2008 Location: Seattle, WA More info | May 31, 2009 02:32 | #2 Well, this is probaably obvious, but you need to have your camera ready when the sun sets / rises, so make sure you get there a bit early to set up. Jack
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RichSoansPhotos THREAD STARTER Cream of the Crop 5,981 posts Likes: 44 Joined Aug 2007 Location: London, UK More info | May 31, 2009 02:53 | #3 Permanent banI am thinking of joining this photographic meet up, who are doing an all-nighter so to speak, i.e. from sunset to sunrise photographic challenge, if you get what I mean
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blackcap Senior Member 415 posts Likes: 1 Joined Dec 2007 More info | May 31, 2009 02:58 | #4 400dabuser wrote in post #8020764 What are the best tips for this type of photography, in the knowledge that: A) I have really limited experience of doing sunset/sunrise photography B) The type of filters I would need for, if I needed them Graduated ND filters are very useful to balance a bright sky with darker foreground and expose both correctly. Exposure bracketing followed by manual blending or HDR is another approach. _______________
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Ephemeral Senior Member 896 posts Joined May 2006 Location: UK (London) More info | I'm no expert, but here are some things that I've learnt. Menara Gardens at Sunset. El Badi Palace ruins at sunset. Something closer to home: Canon 5D + Grip | 85mm L f/1.2 | 17-40mm L f/4.0 | [COLOR=Silver]24-70mm L f/2.8 |[COLOR=Black] 70-200mm f/2.8 L IS | Speedlite 580EX & 430EX | Manfrotto 190Pro + 488RC2
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PhotosGuy Cream of the Crop, R.I.P. More info | May 31, 2009 10:20 | #6 Take a compass so you know just where the sun will be at sunrise & sunset. FrankC - 20D, RAW, Manual everything...
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johnj2803 Senior Member 869 posts Likes: 2 Joined May 2009 Location: Miami, FL More info | May 31, 2009 10:43 | #7 so do you guys meter on the sun then have the foreground dark?
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blackcap Senior Member 415 posts Likes: 1 Joined Dec 2007 More info | May 31, 2009 21:35 | #8 johnj2803 wrote in post #8022307 so do you guys meter on the sun then have the foreground dark? is there a way to have the foreground lighter? since i do get a good shot of the colors of the setting sun but the foreground is really dark. is there a way to have the sun and the foreground be seen? thanks ![]() Graduated ND filters are very useful to balance a bright sky with darker foreground and expose both correctly. Exposure bracketing followed by manual blending or HDR is another approach. I had to blend in the cliffs on the left from another exposure as the grad filter darkened them too much. _______________
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Wazza Cream of the Crop 10,627 posts Likes: 2 Joined Nov 2004 Location: Queenstown, New Zealand More info | May 31, 2009 21:47 | #9 Great shots and examples Chris and Waiman. New Zealand Photography Tours
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blackcap Senior Member 415 posts Likes: 1 Joined Dec 2007 More info | May 31, 2009 22:07 | #10 Wazza wrote in post #8025532 Great shots and examples Chris and Waiman. I also like the recommendation of geographical location - picking the ideal headland to aim for dependent on the direction of sun etc. Latest example is a few days ago, I was up at 3:30am, into London to shoot the O2 Dome/Sunrise, knowing where the best spot would be by looking at google maps. Thanks Warren. Coincidentally I was just looking at your Muriwai shots on Flickr, and then your wedding photos on your website before I read your reply! Very nice shots! _______________
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AprilArchambeau Goldmember 1,055 posts Joined Mar 2009 Location: Martinsburg, Wv More info | Jun 01, 2009 00:36 | #11 blackcap wrote in post #8025462 Graduated ND filters are very useful to balance a bright sky with darker foreground and expose both correctly. Exposure bracketing followed by manual blending or HDR is another approach. There's heaps of useful info here and on the net about the above. Here's an example using a 4-stop hard-edge grad filter: ![]() I had to blend in the cliffs on the left from another exposure as the grad filter darkened them too much.
www.AprilArchambeauPhotography.com
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RichSoansPhotos THREAD STARTER Cream of the Crop 5,981 posts Likes: 44 Joined Aug 2007 Location: London, UK More info | Jun 01, 2009 01:32 | #12 Permanent banNice shots of sunset and sunrise (Only if I could spell that properly)
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blackcap Senior Member 415 posts Likes: 1 Joined Dec 2007 More info | Jun 01, 2009 06:06 | #13 AprilArchambeau wrote in post #8026408 I am sorry, I am new to all of this as well. Did the way the picture came out nice and lighted come from your filter? Or was there alot of PP involved, I LOVE this shot. Could you send me a link to one of these filters you were discussing, I have a few good sunrise/sunset pictures I like, but I would like to have something like this come out a tad bit better instead of grainy ![]() Here is the unprocessed version of this pic (RAW converted to JPG): As you can see, some minor colour adjustment only. However the middle part of the photo is darkened from the graduated nd filter, so I blended those parts in from a different exposure to lighten them. The filters I use are Hitechs (Cokin P size) which I usually buy from Teamwork Digital AprilArchambeau wrote in post #8026408 HDR is something I would like to get into once I get used to my camera, but for now, I want to take this shot below but I just want it to be more colorful and a good bit sharper, it was probably in settings but I am sure that filter could help me out ![]() For this photo, a grad filter isn't really suitable because you don't have a straight horizon. Therefore you really need to take multiple exposures and then blend them manually or use HDR if you want the foreground correctly exposed. _______________
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AprilArchambeau Goldmember 1,055 posts Joined Mar 2009 Location: Martinsburg, Wv More info | Jun 01, 2009 12:36 | #14 I am not all into the HDR yet, although I hope to be within a few months. Anywho, I just want to be able to take the shot above and it look a tad better, it was all in settings I am sure, but would you recommend me getting the filter you mentioned above? And what type of setting should I use it in? www.AprilArchambeauPhotography.com
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johnj2803 Senior Member 869 posts Likes: 2 Joined May 2009 Location: Miami, FL More info | Jun 02, 2009 07:24 | #15 |
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