We interrupt the partisan fireworks for some real ones. I took these tonight.






But its not 4th of July yet...unless this is some Canadian thing.
Mindles:
Why, as these photographs amply demonstrate, do you Hate America (TM)?
Geeky, tech question: Were those taken with a digital camera? How did you get such clear pictures of fireworks? Whenever I shoot digital pictures at night, they come out either too blurry or too dark...
To get good pics of fireworks with a digital camera, you need two things...
1. A camera that will let you manually adjust the shutter speed. IIRC, about 2 seconds seemed to work for me last year.
2. A tripod, because there is no way you can hold a camera steady enough with those very slow shutter speeds.
Chris:
Do you need to remotely trigger the shutter; I always worry that my pressing the shutter button is enough to wobble the picture into bluriness.
Also, what resolution would you think you would need to get those pics (which I think are nice)?
TIA
I've never tried my hand at photographing fireworks, but I have gotten some decent dusk and dark photos from a digital camera when I disabled the flash. If the flash was enabled, the camera adjusted its light-sensitivity accordingly and it turned out just like a normal camera image under similar conditions.
Well, I didn't use optimal methods, but they came out OK.
I have a Canon EOS digital rebel camera and used a 28-200 F3.5 zoom lens. I 'pushed' the ISO to 800 and tried various exposures from 20-60. I rested the camera on my knee (necessary for speeds under 60). Manual focus (auto focus is screwy in the dark).
I took about 70 pictures experimenting with slight changes. The monitor on a digital camera is a wonderful thing. these are the better pix.
Slower exposures would give you longer light lines, but I didn't have a tripod.
By the way, one of the most amazing things I've ever seen was fireworks from above, flying on a clear night.
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