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-   -   Low Light Shooting w/ very fast reaction time (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=678698)

Chris 11-18-2006 09:20 PM

Low Light Shooting w/ very fast reaction time
 
I do alot of concert video work and i am going to start doing pictures aswell
i deal with low lights and very crappy strobe lights flashing all the time

what is the best camera / lense combo for this

any good tutorials for shootin in low light?

tony286 11-18-2006 09:30 PM

canon 30d and 70-200mm/f2.8 go to fredmiranda.com lots of info.

Justfuckedmyself 11-18-2006 10:13 PM

Heres a pretty good tutorial.
http://photo.net/learn/concerts/mirarchi/concer_i

I just shot my first concert a couple weeks ago. Pretty much was just experimenting. But got some decent shots. Shooting with a D70s, 80-300mm lens. Heres a few of the shots I got. (This was Modest Mouse btw)

http://i34.photobucket.com/albums/d1...estMouse-3.jpg
http://i34.photobucket.com/albums/d1...JohnnyMarr.jpg
http://i34.photobucket.com/albums/d1...estMouse-2.jpg

RawAlex 11-19-2006 12:35 AM

If you are lucky, the band with have enough lighting to make it all work out. You can set the camera for a manual exposure, and measure the light average and hope to hit it most of the time. Digital is great because you can review what you are getting and make minor adjustments as you go.

If the lighting is too low, you will find that you have to make the exposures too long and that will lead to blurry images, camera shake, etc.

If you don't have the major dollars but want to try it, you can go out and rent a very high end lens that can get you a few extra stops, and that can help to add much to your images.

If you are shooting slower than about 1/30 you will likely have shake on a hand held camera. You can use a monopod to improve that somewhat without feeling pinned down like a tripod.

DeanCapture 11-19-2006 12:54 AM

Also, you can shoot with higher asa if you need to (which allows for low light photography but also causes grain) and then use a software product like Neat Image to remove the grain from your pics.

LiveDose 11-19-2006 01:02 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Justfuckedmyself (Post 11344383)
Heres a pretty good tutorial.
http://photo.net/learn/concerts/mirarchi/concer_i

I just shot my first concert a couple weeks ago. Pretty much was just experimenting. But got some decent shots. Shooting with a D70s, 80-300mm lens. Heres a few of the shots I got. (This was Modest Mouse btw)

http://i34.photobucket.com/albums/d1...estMouse-3.jpg
http://i34.photobucket.com/albums/d1...JohnnyMarr.jpg
http://i34.photobucket.com/albums/d1...estMouse-2.jpg


Great looking shots.:thumbsup

bobby666 11-19-2006 01:12 AM

great pics, i never managed to get quality shots of a concert

2HousePlague 11-19-2006 01:24 AM

Oh man, I love taking snapshots in low-light, concert/club/bar type settings. I like to use the flash with a slowish shutter speed, so I can isolate the action or detail I want, and reduce the background to a trippy twirl...

http://content.pythic.com/pix/files/1/DSCN0739.JPG

http://content.pythic.com/pix/files/1/DSCN0812.JPG

http://content.pythic.com/pix/files/1/DSCN0773.JPG

http://content.pythic.com/pix/files/1/DSCN0790.JPG

http://content.pythic.com/pix/files/1/DSCN0772.JPG



2hp


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