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Sven January 30th, 2008
A few words on a quick-and-dirty post-processing technique I’ve been twiddling with lately.
Sven January 30th, 2008
A few words on a quick-and-dirty post-processing technique I’ve been twiddling with lately.
Sven January 20th, 2008
Just a community service announcement. For those after a stylish alternative to the standard rubber feet on Manfrotto 190D tripod legs, try 16mm rubber leg tips. The brand I have are Zenith, intended for the sorts of chairs and tables that would probably be considered ‘retro’. Continue Reading »
Sven July 20th, 2007
* Warning: No Photographic Content in This Post. Nerdy Stuff Only *
Ah, Exposerator! Well, last time I posted a version of Exposerator2, it was relatively stable, and performed the basic functions we were after, namely exposure equivalence calculations, countdown timing, and depth-of-field calculations. However, there has been more progress since then, as time has permitted. Continue Reading »
Sven June 29th, 2007
Unfortunately, moonlight is just reflected sunlight, so a long-exposure by it appears much as it might during the day. So, occasionally I cheat, and de-colour an image, to give it that “moonlit” effect. Continue Reading »
Sven April 20th, 2006
This is a repost of a piece I wrote on my previous blog, but hadn’t moved across – it’s here because someone asked what Exposerator was all about…
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Taking long exposures at night is good fun, but trial and error takes a while when you’re shooting twenty-minute frames, so I tend to use the following technique for getting the exposure more-or-less right before I commit myself to the shot.
Now, this technique, while my own invention, is hardly the most innovative, and there may well be other approaches that work as well. However, I haven’t seen any documented, so maybe this will provide some useful starting information for someone new to all this.
I’ll start by composing the shot, and setting the camera to about f/4, ISO1600, and, say, 10 seconds, and take the shot, with noise reduction disabled (though on the Nikon D70, one can just switch the camera off and back on during the noise reduction stage). Depending on the outcome on-screen, I’ll adjust the time, re-take, and so on, until I’m relatively happy. Remember that we’re only measuring light levels here, so this can even be hand-held – the shots themselves will be discarded.
With this sample exposure determined, I’ll then convert to the actual ISO and aperture settings I want for the shot. So, as an example, say I was happy with f/4, ISO1600, and 10 seconds, and I actually wanted f/8, and ISO200. This is an exercise in counting stops:
ISO1600 –> ISO200 is three stops (we halve the figure three times)
f/4 –> f/8 is two stops (doubling the aperture number is two stops)
So, in total, we have five stops of difference, so we double the exposure time five times:
10 seconds –> 20 –> 40 –> 80 –> 160 –> 320 seconds
So, I’ll set the ISO to 200, set the aperture to f/8, and start a timer for 320 seconds, and that’s all there is to it.
As an addendum to this, Chris convinced me to write a mobile phone application to support this, which I did, and called Exposerator. It’s a J2ME application that takes sample exposure details and desired details, and calculates the exposure time (in minutes and seconds). It also has a timer built-in, but oddly enough that part didn’t work on Chris’s phone, despite the fact that he has the same model as I do…