Practice your cave photography by starting with night photography. Night
photography is a great way to work with a blank canvas. You won’t have whole
lot going on at night so it makes it a little bit easier to work with;
especially if your one for star photos. Before you start, remember long
exposure shots will drain your battery faster, so always bring a backup
battery. These four tips will help you get to know your camera better and get a
feel for long exposure shots.
1. Setup times are best at dusk or
dawn and the best times to start taking long exposure photos; aka “sweet
lighting.”
2. Three factors affect the exposure: shutter speed, aperture and ISO. Put your camera setting from auto to manual. This gives you full control over all settings. Widen your aperture and slow down your shutter speed. Then, raise your ISO a bit but don’t go pass 800 ISO otherwise you will have a lot of grainy and noise in the background.
3. To get a clear image, always use a tripod when shooting at night or anything long exposure.
4. Finally try these fun photo ideas to work on with long exposure: Light trails, moon lighting, reflections, and stars.
2. Three factors affect the exposure: shutter speed, aperture and ISO. Put your camera setting from auto to manual. This gives you full control over all settings. Widen your aperture and slow down your shutter speed. Then, raise your ISO a bit but don’t go pass 800 ISO otherwise you will have a lot of grainy and noise in the background.
3. To get a clear image, always use a tripod when shooting at night or anything long exposure.
4. Finally try these fun photo ideas to work on with long exposure: Light trails, moon lighting, reflections, and stars.
#EWLS, #womencavers, #speleology
www.ewls.org
www.ewls.org
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