Low Light C&C please
My first try in very low light with a D300. I was shooting using camp fire light after dark hand held. I will post a few pictures rather than post a link to a bunch of tiresome pictures.
1.
camera info for 1) f2.8, 1/3 sec, ISO 2000, WB Auto, Aperture priority. JPEG only.
2.
Camera info... f2.8, 1/5 sec, ISO 3200, WB auto, aperture priority, auto WB (RAW adjusted in PP). Some cropping and adjustments to light in PP.
Last shot, my daughter and with our friends:
Camera info... f2.8, 1/15s, ISO 3200, aperture priority, auto WB (RAW adjusted in PP)
I can not remember if I used spot or spot matrix metering. The second and third pictures were taken the next night and the fire was generally not bright enough to use a lower ISO. Picture #2 is not as nice at full size due to noise (understandable given the high ISO). I have access to Capture NX for post production and Adoby CS3 on another computer (will not run with Vista). If you suggest reducing noise please suggest program. Overall I am happy with the photos just because I would have never tried this with my D70.
Thanks in advance for you time and any suggestions - short of telling me to give the camera to someone that can use it. (~;
John
1.
camera info for 1) f2.8, 1/3 sec, ISO 2000, WB Auto, Aperture priority. JPEG only.
2.
Camera info... f2.8, 1/5 sec, ISO 3200, WB auto, aperture priority, auto WB (RAW adjusted in PP). Some cropping and adjustments to light in PP.
Last shot, my daughter and with our friends:
Camera info... f2.8, 1/15s, ISO 3200, aperture priority, auto WB (RAW adjusted in PP)
I can not remember if I used spot or spot matrix metering. The second and third pictures were taken the next night and the fire was generally not bright enough to use a lower ISO. Picture #2 is not as nice at full size due to noise (understandable given the high ISO). I have access to Capture NX for post production and Adoby CS3 on another computer (will not run with Vista). If you suggest reducing noise please suggest program. Overall I am happy with the photos just because I would have never tried this with my D70.
Thanks in advance for you time and any suggestions - short of telling me to give the camera to someone that can use it. (~;
John
0
Comments
I like #3 the best, given that the posing lends itself to a campfire circle,whereas with 1 & 2 if you didn't know you might wonder.
Biggest problem I have with campfire shots is shooting through the heat distortions.
Jon
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I did not expect a reply so quickly. Thanks.
I think I might clone out the square on your daughter's head and, maybe, crop out the house in the background. These "fixes" would make it a very much more focused image.
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Absolutely, 100% agree. #3 is a great shot, even better with a few little changes. Good catch.
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It gives context to what's going on. What everyone is looking at & why the photo's have that color cast.
Give it a try on your next shoot
Thanks. I tried to resist the urge to post to many pictures. I wanted to post pictures that I was not ashamed of but at the same time had things I wanted to fix. Noise - which may require more camera than I can afford - and post processing. A few shots of and around the fire:
This one just after sunset but before dark. The subject is the fire - I focused on log - and shot at f5 to attempt to get more depth of field so both would be in focus. I should have focused on the back of the fire pit or used a higher f stop. Again I was hand holding for these shots so camera shake is coming into play. Thanks for all the help everyone. Keep it coming I am learning a lot.
My iso varied from 1600 - 2500 and I had massive noise. Thank god for Light Room and NoiseNinja.
It looks like you did a pretty good job considering the equipment you used. Oh well, we'll suffer until we can justify buying a Nikon 70-200mm f/2.8 VR Lens.
Good job!