View Full Version : 4th of July


Fred Foronda
June 18th, 2006, 03:23 PM
4th of July is coming up and that means fireworks! I shot fireworks before with the fx1 with with practically everything auto excpet I had the spot light function turned on. I got a pretty okay results. How would you go about in these lighting conditions.

Thanks

Mack Fisher
June 18th, 2006, 07:30 PM
I would keep it at 1/60th shutter speed, adjust the auto for a good black but focus on getting the fireworks good depending on the amount and brightness. Probably end up sing F1.6 anyways. I would turn the AE shift up mabye 1-2 notches.

John McGinley
June 18th, 2006, 09:43 PM
4th of July is coming up and that means fireworks! I shot fireworks before with the fx1 with with practically everything auto excpet I had the spot light function turned on. I got a pretty okay results. How would you go about in these lighting conditions.

Thanks

Autofocus went nuts when I shot fireworks at my brother's wedding last year with my FX1(he's a pyrotechnics guy, so it was more than sparklers). I would definately try to get your focus set and lock it in. I also locked in the shutter at 60

Greg Boston
June 18th, 2006, 10:14 PM
Set focus to manual and infinity. This is how I shoot it with the XL2. You really can't use auto anything under these conditions.

-gb-

Fred Foronda
June 19th, 2006, 12:01 PM
thanks guys. I just remembered that I did had it on manual focus.

Heath McKnight
July 9th, 2006, 07:40 AM
This is slightly similar to shooting lightning at night...I spent 15 minutes watching my focus go crazy because I thought putting my old XL1 on auto would've helped. I wish I knew about this forum 4 years ago. By the time I set the focus right, the lightning was pretty much done.

Lesson learned for me...be prepared, even if it's something planned like fireworks or of-the-moment, like night lightning. Also, and I know this is post-4th of July, but try not to be anywhere near light, like a lamp post or whatnot. The glare is a killer.

heath