Need Help...Outdoor Holiday Lighting
A friend asked me to photograph his house to capture a pretty elaborate lighting arrangement (he said it gives the Griswald's a serious run for their money).
Would anyone have suggestions regarding photographing the house to best capture the holiday lighting? It's Florida, so weather's not an issue. Nor is equipment (Pentax K10D with a wide assortment of lenses). Thanks!
John
Would anyone have suggestions regarding photographing the house to best capture the holiday lighting? It's Florida, so weather's not an issue. Nor is equipment (Pentax K10D with a wide assortment of lenses). Thanks!
John
0
Comments
www.intruecolors.com
Nikon D700 x2/D300
Nikon 70-200 2.8/50 1.8/85 1.8/14.24 2.8
Except, since you are going to use a tripod, use a narrow f/stop to get more of a star pattern on the lights and since it will be an even longer shutter speed, it should blur any passers by and that kind of thing.
My suggestion is to frame the shot and shoot it both ways. That way you have alternates!
Enjoy the holidays!
SmugMug Gallery
Many of the best "night" shots are actually from twilight....
Post the results!
Try ISO 800 f4.5 1/15th sec 24mm That is what I used for this shot that has been previously posted..
I usually find I need about -2/3 to - 1 1/3 stops of exposure compensation when metering with Evaluative Metering with a Canon 20D
Moderator of the Technique Forum and Finishing School on Dgrin
As for exposure, the key is to push it as bright as you can while preserving color in the lights. You'll probably run into trouble blowing out the red channel first, so if you have an RGB histogram, use it. Your luminance histogram is near useless when shooting a red heavy scene.
Some other thoughts. Christmas lights are low temperature incandescents. The proper white balance for them will likely be in the 2800K range. If you use one of the WB presets, tungsten is probably the best choice unless the scene also includes elements lit by flourescents. If there are flourescents, I'd WB for them and let the incandescents fall where they may.