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| *SoulEyes Photography>>>Flash Photography |
Night photography with 35mm SLR camera (beginner, help needed)? |
I've got myself a lovely old, Minolta SRT101 camera with the original Rokkor 55mm f1.7 lens attached to it. I'm basically just after some free advice about shooting at night with it. I've got a tripod and one of those release cables. But when it comes to the settings, I'm a little confused. I plan on using 400 ASA films, the widest aperture setting (which is f1.7 on this lens) and shutter speeds like 1/60, 1/30 and 1/15 of a second. This is what I used to do. I really liked 25 ASA film, the higher the rating, the courser the grain. Shoot with the smallest aperture you can, 11 16 22. You can then make the exposures really long. 30 secs+ illuminate the foreground with a hand held flash or even a torch (torch painting) Sounds like you are set to go, just change exposures from 1/30th on down to bulb where you hold the shutter down until you feel like releasing it several seconds later and see what you get. The carlight trails always look neat. Also if you are riding in the front seat of the car, put the camera on the dashboard, aiming forward, and hold the shutter open for a few seconds as the car goes down a well lit street. This will give you a neat streak that starts in the middle of the frame and extends to the sides. I started with a Minolta SRT 100 myself, good beginner camera; no auto features so you have to learn. Ah the SRT-101...that was my first 35mm camera! It is so heavy that you could use it to defend yourself if need be! There should be a table of settings inside your roll of film offering suggested times and apertures. That's the best place to start, then bracket from there. Have fun, I hope you'll share the results! Try the widest aperture with each shutter speed. Mark each of these down. Then go to the next aperture setting and repeat same process. you will see the difference. There is faster film you can buy at a camera store that sells camera equipment and you may get good advice from these sales people. I would tend to lean towards some longer shutter speeds, unless your in extremely brightly lit areas. The 400 sp film is a good idea, bracket your exposures, and keep a note book on your settings. Practice will make you a nocturnal pro !! Here you go. Settings that will get you some good images. I use the FotoSharp (fotosharp.com) Day & Night Exposure Guide and highly recommend it. Everybody's answers are great. My only suggestion would be to use the lowest commercially available film speed (ISO100). |
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