Victoria At Night | YOUR THEMES | Photo Forum

Welcome to a new Easy Exposure Photo Forum! I hope you will enjoy new features. It is still work in progress, so please be patients. Thanks!


Avatar

Please consider registering
guest

sp_LogInOut Log In sp_Registration Register sp_MemberList Members

Register | Lost password?
Advanced Search

— Forum Scope —




— Match —





— Forum Options —





Minimum search word length is 3 characters - maximum search word length is 84 characters

sp_Feed Topic RSS sp_TopicIcon
Victoria At Night
Topic Rating: 0 Topic Rating: 0 Topic Rating: 0 Topic Rating: 0 Topic Rating: 0 Topic Rating: 0 (0 votes) 
September 29, 2013
9:32 pm
Avatar
Member
Members

VIP Student
Forum Posts: 1594
Member Since:
December 2, 2012
sp_UserOfflineSmall Offline

Using a tripod, remote release and 15-25 second exposures.
Our old bridge being lowered following the passing of a tug and barge.
First cars passed over this bridge in 1924. By the fall of 2015 a new bridge
will take its place beside it and this bridge will be sold for scrap.
Twenty five second exposure of a tugboats lights passing by on its way to
the old bridge.
The hotel is on our waterfront and I think it could be used in a Stephen King movie.
Maybe The Shining 2?DSC_2158.jpgDSC_2197.jpgDSC_1684.jpgDSC_2017.jpgDSC_2149.jpg

sp_PlupAttachments Attachments
September 30, 2013
4:01 am
Avatar
Long Island, New York
Member
Members

VIP Student
Forum Posts: 2719
Member Since:
September 15, 2012
sp_UserOfflineSmall Offline

Very nice set of images, Dale.
I especially like the shot of the Delta Hotel and found this link for more information.

http://www.expedia.com/Victori…..4AodeTQApQ

It’s curious that you can see the lights (and their reflections) of the tugboat, but no sign of the tugboat itself.
Maybe it disappeared in the fog mist of the Stephen King movie.

 

-- Mandrake --

September 30, 2013
5:32 am
Avatar
Member
Members

VIP Student
Forum Posts: 1594
Member Since:
December 2, 2012
sp_UserOfflineSmall Offline

Appreciate the comments Mandrake.
I’m really enjoying using a tripod and taking longer night exposures.
The tugboat and barge were very dark but the lights were quite bright.
My explanation would be that as the dark objects passed by the brighter
background the lights from the boat and the buildings etc. were captured
but the boat became invisible on the finished shot. I took several pictures
of the boat and barge as it made its way past me and the results were always
the same – bright lights/no boat. The weather is changing quickly here now (for
the worse) so I don’t think I’ll be doing a lot of outdoor stuff for quite a while.
And thanks for the link – I’ll have a good look at it later today when I have more
time. By the way – saw your close=up of the spider (nice capture and really focused).
Spiders are not on my top ten list for likes but they do make for interesting subjects.
If you get a chance I really recommend having a try at longer exposures using a tripod,
remote release and higher fstops – f11-f18 work pretty well. I’m also learning that over
exposing works better to capture details in dark areas but that’s still in my early learning
phase and it will take time to figure out properly.
Dale.

 

 

 

September 30, 2013
8:17 am
Avatar
Member
Members
Forum Posts: 812
Member Since:
September 30, 2012
sp_UserOfflineSmall Offline

Nice set of Images Dale, I think you are really enjoying taking photos at night with tripod, will get much satisfaction while capturing in low shutter speed, it will have amazing result. well done.

Muneer

September 30, 2013
8:21 am
Avatar
Spartanburg, SC
Member
Members

VIP Student
Forum Posts: 1054
Member Since:
March 23, 2013
sp_UserOfflineSmall Offline

I like the second and fourth photos…

September 30, 2013
11:57 am
Avatar
Member
Members

VIP Student
Forum Posts: 1594
Member Since:
December 2, 2012
sp_UserOfflineSmall Offline

Thanks for the comments guys.
I’m having a great time playing around with longer exposures and
night photography. It takes a little practice to second guess your
camera exposure settings but the results can be fantastic. I always
use spot metering so I throw the cameras suggestion on f-stop and
exposure time out the window and choose my own – sometimes it works
and sometimes it don’t lol!
That first shot of the old bridge lowering looks way better in high resolution –
almost looks like it has teeth and it’s not giving up without a fight.
I’m going to do some more work on it in Lr and see if I can get an interesting
result worth printing.
Dale.

Forum Timezone: America/Los_Angeles

Most Users Ever Online: 208

Currently Online:
21 Guest(s)

Currently Browsing this Page:
1 Guest(s)

Top Posters:

Mandrake: 2719

nikonguy: 1594

mscharff: 1054

Muneer: 812

Silky: 554

intekhab0731: 553

sameerfulari: 466

Brian Copeland: 449

ergig: 307

Bjørn (Madman): 278

Member Stats:

Guest Posters: 7

Members: 2641

Moderators: 0

Admins: 1

Forum Stats:

Groups: 14

Forums: 87

Topics: 2777

Posts: 15434

Administrators: easyexposure: 2164

Comments are closed.