| Technique: How To Shoot It Ask questions about how to take pics, as well as share your own favorite shooting tips. |
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Fireworks |
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07-07-2009
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#1
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良かったね!
flip is offline
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Kobe, Japan
Posts: 1,216
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Fireworks
Good evening. It's coming on fireworks season here in Japan. My GF asked me to a weekend in Wakayama where there's a large show. In the past, I've setup my Canon 20D on the tripod, attached the cable and relaxed. However, I rarely use the Canon now as my RF equipment is generally superior and more enjoyable to use.
Cut to the chase. What would you take on such a 2-day trip to include beach and fireworks:
Epson R-D1
Hexar RF
Olympus Pen FV (+25/4, 38/1.8)
The Canon (+28-75)
If I go with a RF, is there any advantage to a fast, modern lens over a vintage, smaller lens? Specifically, I perceive the differences between, say, a Canon 35/2.0 and CV 35/1.2 in day shots. At night, I see the speed advantage of the 1.2. However, these shots are f/8-11 and slow. Would the rendering of fireworks differ much?
__________________
Very happy with my Shintaro BP M2. Thanks!
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07-07-2009
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#2
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Lord of Broken Toys
bmattock is offline
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Detroit Area
Posts: 10,201
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Quote:
Originally Posted by flip
Good evening. It's coming on fireworks season here in Japan. My GF asked me to a weekend in Wakayama where there's a large show. In the past, I've setup my Canon 20D on the tripod, attached the cable and relaxed. However, I rarely use the Canon now as my RF equipment is generally superior and more enjoyable to use.
Cut to the chase. What would you take on such a 2-day trip to include beach and fireworks:
Epson R-D1
Hexar RF
Olympus Pen FV (+25/4, 38/1.8)
The Canon (+28-75)
If I go with a RF, is there any advantage to a fast, modern lens over a vintage, smaller lens? Specifically, I perceive the differences between, say, a Canon 35/2.0 and CV 35/1.2 in day shots. At night, I see the speed advantage of the 1.2. However, these shots are f/8-11 and slow. Would the rendering of fireworks differ much?
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Fast lenses are not necessary, as you won't be using them wide-open. Rangefinders are fine. Suggest film over digital because film tends to have less 'noise' for a longer exposure, but I'm sure both would work fine.
http://www.nyip.com/ezine/holidays/firewks.html
Use a tripod and a cable release. f/11 and a one-second exposure with the lens set at infinity and you should be fine.
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Immanentizing the eschaton since 1987.
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07-07-2009
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#3
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Registered User
MCTuomey is offline
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: U.S.
Age: 59
Posts: 2,771
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my take: iso 100, daylight film or WB, f8, 1-4 second exposure depending on wind, background, etc.
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Mike
Bill Pierce's "photographer's proposition": I saw something wonderful, let me show it to you.
Leica and Zeiss M
Minolta Autocord
Fuji GX680 (in process)
My Smugmug Website
My Flickr
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07-07-2009
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#4
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Shoot Film
aperture64 is offline
Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 565
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I use digital with excellent results. Canon G9. 15 seconds @ 5.6 @ 80ASA. The only problem the camera has is a long wait for the chip to process the image.
Mine can be seen on my Flickr page. Link in my signature.
In the past, I have also used a slow speed slide film with excellent results. Try E100VS.
Last edited by aperture64 : 07-07-2009 at 06:21.
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07-09-2009
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#5
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Registered User
eric.schmiedl is offline
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Posts: 40
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My 4th of July shots: http://bit.ly/4jGgf
Here's how I got them:
ISO 100-200
f/5.6 to f/11 (judge by eye from the LCD after a couple of fireworks)
shutter on "bulb" (you control when it opens and closes)
use a beefy tripod
open shutter when you see orange flashes of fireworks being launched
from the barge
close shutter when you feel lucky
Now, for good measure I was using three cameras simultaneously... the problem is when you see another shot beginning while you have the shutter open already, what are you gonna do? the solution is to have another camera ready... I would never shoot fireworks on film, because there's no time to change film while the show is going on. (Maybe if you have a medium-format camera and a whole pile of film backs ready to swap out...) A high-capacity CF card that will give you 300+ shots is really useful here. AND SHOOT RAW! But that goes without saying.
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07-09-2009
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#6
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Registered User
JohnTF is offline
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Home is Cleveland, Summers often Europe, Winters often Mexico.
Posts: 2,060
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I had a Nikon in the trunk along with a tripod, and was out shooting something else that day with a Contax.
I set it up, used B at f 11, Iso 200 color negative, framed the shot, and covered the lens between bursts I wanted to capture. A zoom helps in framing what you want quickly as I did not know where the bursts would be and how wide the field.
30 seconds worked for the background, and of course the fireworks self expose. I kind of tried to remember if part of the frame was blank and waited for something to happen there. You get a bit of warning sometimes before the big star burst.
They printed well the next day.
I used the M8 during a party overlooking the harbor in Vallarta on New Years, and braced myself to hand hold best I could, got one or two good shots, Iso 160 f 11, and a few seconds exposure. I have to figure how to get and stash a tripod in Mexico with friends down there.
Main thing for me is to have something interesting in the shot besides the fireworks. Across from the Champs de Mars in Paris gives you the Eiffel tower.
In Vallarta, all the hotels have fireworks, so you get the entire bay.
Regards, John
__________________
To capture some of this -- I suppose that's lyricism.
Josef Sudek
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07-10-2009
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#7
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良かったね!
flip is offline
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Kobe, Japan
Posts: 1,216
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Thank you for the interesting advice. It sounds like the choice of camera and lens is largely irrelevant but that I may benefit from using film for longer shots combining different periods of bursting. Appreciated!
__________________
Very happy with my Shintaro BP M2. Thanks!
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07-10-2009
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#8
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Registered User
Al Kaplan is offline
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Miami, FL
Age: 70
Posts: 4,572
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Just save some film for the end of the show when they usually set off a whole bunch of them very rapidly. You'll get better pictures if you have a clear sky, no clouds, and if you're far from a brightly lit city. That causes the sky to be lighter just from light reflected back from air pollution.
Some places have fireworks on New Year's Eve so you'll get a second chance.
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07-10-2009
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#9
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Shoot Film
aperture64 is offline
Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 565
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Al Kaplan
You'll get better pictures if you have a clear sky, no clouds, and if you're far from a brightly lit city. That causes the sky to be lighter just from light reflected back from air pollution.
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Not really. I am 30 minutes from NYC and there is no light pollution in my photos. The fireworks are too bright and exposures to short for it to show up. I was using 15 seconds @ 5.6.
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07-10-2009
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#10
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... likes film.
maddoc is offline
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: 調布市
Age: 47
Posts: 6,467
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Ah ...fireworks in Japan  Velvia50, tripod, cable release, f/5.6 to f/11, 40 to 60 seconds.

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07-10-2009
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#11
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Registered User
JohnTF is offline
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Home is Cleveland, Summers often Europe, Winters often Mexico.
Posts: 2,060
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Nice shot. John
__________________
To capture some of this -- I suppose that's lyricism.
Josef Sudek
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07-10-2009
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#12
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coco frío
Pablito is offline
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Salsipuedes
Posts: 2,987
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I've shot them on film many times, the exposure times suggested above sound right. Low ISO, f8-11 tripod, long exposure etc. However, one advantage of digital is you can check exposure right away. Less exposure / lower ISO will give you more saturated colors in the fireworks whereas more exposure / Higher ISO will give you more detail in the surroundings. No way to really meter for this, trial and error is the only way. And with the Canon, you can check right away. That's why I would use the digital. Or if you really want to use film, use the digital as a sort of instant polaroid proof.
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08-23-2009
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#13
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Registered User
Tracnac is offline
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Near Paris
Age: 42
Posts: 82
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A nice camera for firework is the Olympus OM2n (OTF that's do the job for you...)
Yvan.
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08-24-2009
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#14
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良かったね!
flip is offline
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Kobe, Japan
Posts: 1,216
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Well, I got back my shots on film and could compare with the digital. I'm surprised with my film success. I've been reluctant to leave the safety of digital for this particular type of shooting, but the results were consistently good given the limitations I put on myself.... I didn't know the field of view I would be addresing, so, I brought a canon 35/2 and the cv 15 - lenses I wasn't afraid to bring to the beach. the 15 introduced some foreround distortion, but I knew I got everything. :-D And using similar approaches as previously, the results were nice. I also - for the first time - tried putting a cloth over the lens between shells in order to incread the number in the frame. Worked quite well and without the noise I'd expect on digital.
Thanks, all!
__________________
Very happy with my Shintaro BP M2. Thanks!
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07-02-2011
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#15
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Registered User
dave lackey is offline
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Atlanta, Ga
Posts: 6,703
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Bump for discussion...
BTW, Gabor, that is awesome. Now I have a reason to shoot my Velvia 50 this weekend! 
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07-02-2011
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#16
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良かったね!
flip is offline
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Kobe, Japan
Posts: 1,216
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Indeed. Great shot. Good bump. The GF is gone. Fireworks are back. :^)
This year, Nex + Hex 21-35 + remote. Just too easy.
__________________
Very happy with my Shintaro BP M2. Thanks!
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07-02-2011
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#17
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... likes film.
maddoc is offline
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: 調布市
Age: 47
Posts: 6,467
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Oh ... a one year old thread ! Thanks guys for the comments !!  For me also history since that photo was taken in Sapporo in 2008 using my Hasselblad and while I moved to the Tokyo region last year the Hasselblad has been sold recently ...
This year it looks like many fire works will be canceled for obvious reasons ... (the victims of the Tohoku desaster and also the power brown outs)
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07-02-2011
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#18
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Registered User
dave lackey is offline
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Atlanta, Ga
Posts: 6,703
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Quote:
Originally Posted by maddoc
Oh ... a one year old thread ! Thanks guys for the comments !!  For me also history since that photo was taken in Sapporo in 2008 using my Hasselblad and while I moved to the Tokyo region last year the Hasselblad has been sold recently ...
This year it looks like many fire works will be canceled for obvious reasons ... (the victims of the Tohoku desaster and also the power brown outs)
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Gabor,
So, I am going to finish up a roll of Sensia 100 (10 frames left)with the fireworks show this weekend. Tripod, zoom for coverage, set the exposure on f8 and B and try for 20 seconds or so? That is all there is to it?  And then go to Velvia 50 at 40-60 seconds?
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07-02-2011
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#19
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... likes film.
maddoc is offline
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: 調布市
Age: 47
Posts: 6,467
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Dave,
it is that easy  Just avoid having too bright light sources in the background or sky as they will show up to much .
Enjoy your 4th of July !
Cheers,
Gabor
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07-02-2011
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#20
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actually a dude
mabelsound is offline
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Upstate NY
Age: 43
Posts: 5,403
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M9 did OK. Some banding. I should probably have brought my DSLR....but it was more fun with a Leica.
TC3 Community Fireworks 2011-16 by mabel.sound, on Flickr
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07-03-2011
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#21
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od karnevala
dotur is offline
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Zagreb, Croatia
Posts: 1,367
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www.ivanlozica.com
Digilux 3, aperture priority, self-timer, f/8.0, ASA 400
0001dot2011 by dotur, on Flickr
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