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Low Light Pictures

Joined
Jan 16, 2009
Messages
772
Location
Kansas City
I have a Nikon D40 and have had problems getting good pictures just as it's turning dark. What settings do i need to have have to make the pictures show up?

Also what about pics of lightening at night?

Thanks
 
It's pretty simple really. You're going to have to go wide open with the aperture and use a tripod as your shutter speed is going to be really slow to allow more light to brighten things up. I really never crank up the ISO because it gets too noisy. Go out some evenings and play around with it.
 
Jim, thanks for the link to your lightning photography page. I am also in Kansas and have seen a number of your lightning shots on Flickr. It is very helpful to learn tips from some one so skilled.
 
I have a Nikon D40 and have had problems getting good pictures just as it's turning dark. What settings do i need to have have to make the pictures show up?

Also what about pics of lightening at night?

Thanks

On my Canon Powershot A530 point n shoot, I've found that having the F/Stop at 2.8 and exposure time at about a second gives good results. Definitely use a tripod for any photos shot @ slower than 1/60 sec. Leaving the ISO alone reduces image 'noise' to an acceptable level.The beauty of digital cameras is this: you can experiment 'till you get the photos right.
 
On my Canon Powershot A530 point n shoot, I've found that having the F/Stop at 2.8 and exposure time at about a second gives good results. Definitely use a tripod for any photos shot @ slower than 1/60 sec. Leaving the ISO alone reduces image 'noise' to an acceptable level.The beauty of digital cameras is this: you can experiment 'till you get the photos right.

IMO, for best results, I wouldn't hand hold anything slower than 1/125.
 
IMO, for best results, I wouldn't hand hold anything slower than 1/125.
Very true Brandon. In "dummy" mode, you have auto image stabilization. When I'm shooting in manual mode, i normally free-hand with 1/250 and faster. Anything slower, is tripoded or otherwise kept stable and still. Because nobody likes ghost images in their photos!
 
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