- Post your Lightning Photos -
We had a really impressive thunderstorm in the desert here recently... At one point it averaged 2-3 strikes per second. Luckily the storm was about 50 miles away when I took these pics. Most of these were 1-2 min exposures at an ISO of 400 or 800 to capture multiple quick flashes. Because of that you can see some artifacts of the noise reduction I had to put them through...
Thought I would post some anyway...
Anyone have some lightning pics they'd like to share?
Thought I would post some anyway...
Anyone have some lightning pics they'd like to share?
0
Comments
pretty cool with the stars and lightning.
Gus, I think your balcony qualifies as "the spot" to shoot from
Two from June in the UK
Cheers
Stan
SmugMug Technical Account Manager
Travel = good. Woo, shooting!
nickwphoto
Here's his lightning gallery: http://home.comcast.net/~langfords/lightning/index.html
http://philu.smugmug.com
James.
http://www.jamesjweg.com
phil
my pictures live here. well, eventually they all will.
Keep ISO as low as possible...this is about long exposure not fast shutter speed. The lower the ISO the clearer the shot.
Use an long exposure to catch multiple strikes (30 sec is a good time for me).
Use small apature to keep foreground & the distance in focus & this will help slow the shutter speed.
Use the widest lens youve got to get as much in as possible.
Date Taken:2005-05-18 17:46:00Date Digitized:2005-05-18 17:46:00Make:CanonModel: Canon EOS 20D Size: 4048x2698 Bytes: 7472777 Aperture: f/16.0 ISO: 100 Focal Length: 10mm (guess: 8mm in 35mm) Exposure Time: 30s (30/1)Flash:Flash did not fire, compulsory flash modeExposure Program:Aperture priorityExposure Bias:0ColorSpace:sRGB
Gus
Nick
SmugMug Technical Account Manager
Travel = good. Woo, shooting!
nickwphoto
It's about a lightning strike on the top of Half Dome in Yosemite National Park. Caught
a few people on top. Some lucky. Some not so lucky. Circumstance really paid off for
those who were lucky.
Many of the characters in this true story are from SF Bay Area. Specifically the city I
live in...
Ian
http://www.desertshadowphoto.com
http://aero-nut.smugmug.com
I have a friend that has a fulgurite where lightning hit the beach & its a glass cylinder & you can see small shells in it.
If you are anywhere near central Arizona:
http://uanews.org/cgi-bin/WebObjects/UANews.woa/wa/MainStoryDetails?ArticleID=11449
Adrienne (who is hoping to get some nice monsoon lightning shots in the coming weeks!)
lots more here
http://public.fotki.com/adhaney/photos_2004/nature_and_animal_life/lightning/
20D | 300D-IR | EF-S 10-22 | EF-S 18-55 | 50 f/1.8 II | 70-200 f/4L | 17-40L | Lensbaby 2.0 | 250D | 550ex | Gitzo 1257 | RRS BH-40 | RRS L-plates
The Blog | The Photos
I had a look at the shot on your site, it says sony Cybershot at 15mm 30 sec.
WOW that is awesome, you must have been with in a couple of hundred yards of the strike?
I take it you were in a Faraday Box.
Cheers
Stan
nope my dumb ass was standing down at teh street in my pj's across from where it hit with the camera on a tripod...
lol
20D | 300D-IR | EF-S 10-22 | EF-S 18-55 | 50 f/1.8 II | 70-200 f/4L | 17-40L | Lensbaby 2.0 | 250D | 550ex | Gitzo 1257 | RRS BH-40 | RRS L-plates
The Blog | The Photos
Cheers
Stan
I miss lightning... not much here in LA. Even less than in Seattle, I think.
Gus
Here is another one from the same storm.
Gus
Have a butchers at his work. Some good gear in there.
Gus
So while "Roadkill" still remains appropriate, perhaps "Sparky" might also apply.
http://philu.smugmug.com
He does have some great stuff!
http://philu.smugmug.com
http://www.desertshadowphoto.com
http://aero-nut.smugmug.com