How can I improve my fireworks photography?












5















During the recent New Year's celebrations I attempted to capture some of the fireworks on display with a rather mixed bag of results that look very little like the stock imagery one associates with celebratory fireworks.




5s, f/14, ISO 500




The fireworks are overexposed and the surroundings underexposed




At 10 sec the ambient structures are more visible but the fireworks are terribly overexposed




A 2.5 second exposure did make the fireworks come out better at the detriment of the surroundings. Admittedly, the setup capturing the building in this shot does not help the composition but that's seconday.










share|improve this question



























    5















    During the recent New Year's celebrations I attempted to capture some of the fireworks on display with a rather mixed bag of results that look very little like the stock imagery one associates with celebratory fireworks.




    5s, f/14, ISO 500




    The fireworks are overexposed and the surroundings underexposed




    At 10 sec the ambient structures are more visible but the fireworks are terribly overexposed




    A 2.5 second exposure did make the fireworks come out better at the detriment of the surroundings. Admittedly, the setup capturing the building in this shot does not help the composition but that's seconday.










    share|improve this question

























      5












      5








      5


      1






      During the recent New Year's celebrations I attempted to capture some of the fireworks on display with a rather mixed bag of results that look very little like the stock imagery one associates with celebratory fireworks.




      5s, f/14, ISO 500




      The fireworks are overexposed and the surroundings underexposed




      At 10 sec the ambient structures are more visible but the fireworks are terribly overexposed




      A 2.5 second exposure did make the fireworks come out better at the detriment of the surroundings. Admittedly, the setup capturing the building in this shot does not help the composition but that's seconday.










      share|improve this question














      During the recent New Year's celebrations I attempted to capture some of the fireworks on display with a rather mixed bag of results that look very little like the stock imagery one associates with celebratory fireworks.




      5s, f/14, ISO 500




      The fireworks are overexposed and the surroundings underexposed




      At 10 sec the ambient structures are more visible but the fireworks are terribly overexposed




      A 2.5 second exposure did make the fireworks come out better at the detriment of the surroundings. Admittedly, the setup capturing the building in this shot does not help the composition but that's seconday.







      long-exposure fireworks






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked 11 hours ago









      LevonLevon

      1725




      1725






















          4 Answers
          4






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          3














          Use a tripod, take a shot of surroundings during an intermission (or even better, at dusk, before the fireworks start), and then shoot the fireworks. Blend the images in post production (this is a case where accurate overlap isn't even necessary).






          share|improve this answer































            3














            There are many ways to tackle fireworks. A lot of it is experimental.



            I found that I get near perfect handheld results with a 22mm to 35mm lens at around f/2.0 or f/2.8, ISO800 to ISO1250 and a shutter speed of 1/30 to 1/50. I keep the camera on Servo with continuous shooting.



            It allows for shots that have the light streaks but keeps the highlights just below the point where they are completely blown out.



            Any longer than 1/30 sec, I find that the highlights become unrecoverable.



            Here are some cropped examples captured handheld on a Canon EOS-M(2012) with the above settings at Disney from the middle of a massive crowd, strollers and kids all over the place. In other words, no space for a tripod.



            and the biggest secret that I just remembered, click after the explosion! that way you avoid the bright blownout explosion and capture just the streaks.



            enter image description here



            enter image description here



            enter image description here






            share|improve this answer

































              1














              These were taken with a Canon 700D with a 22 mm lens f/10 2,5 sec ISO 200



              I had the camera set on a tripod and I was shooting with a remote control continuously leaving 1/2 seconds the camera cool before the next shot regardless of what was happening in front of me. Most of the shots showed nothing remarkable, but I got several nice shots.



              June 24 2017, St. John's day, Turin, Italy



              June 24 2017, St. John's day, Turin, Italy






              share|improve this answer








              New contributor




              Andrea Mori is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.





















              • Damn this looks awesome!

                – return true
                3 hours ago



















              0














              Think about what happens in a fireworks display. Essentially, the sky is black. Within the sky, a series of bright lights turn themselves on and then off in random places. The important thing to realise is that each firework is its own shutter! You need to set your ISO and aperture so that each firework's "natural shutter" results in a correct exposure of that firework. You can then leave the camera's shutter open for more or less as long as you want, and each firework that appears during that time will be added to the image, correctly exposed. If you leave the shutter open too long, multiple fireworks may go off in the same spot, which will over-expose.



              I've found that something like f/11 and ISO-100 (fireworks are bright!) works well; if the fireworks are farther away, a wider aperture might be needed, as less of their light will be reaching you. Manual focus because you don't want the camera hunting trying to focus on the black sky, and the aperture's narrow enough, and the fireworks far enough away, that you'll have plenty of depth of field. Manual exposure mode, too. Tripod, of course.



              If you're shooting fireworks just against the sky, use bulb mode, so you can start the exposure when something interesting is happening and stop when you think you've caught enough. If you're shooting with a foreground, choose whatever shutter speed gives a the exposure you want on that foreground – unfortunately, that means you can no longer choose how many fireworks you get in each shot. Make sure you figure out that exposure before the fireworks start.



              Check the first few exposures, as you'll probably need to adjust.




              • If your initial guess of aperture and ISO were wrong for this fireworks display, you'll need to adjust to get them correctly exposed and you'll need to make the corresponding adjustment to the shutter speed so that the foreground exposure remains correct.


              • If the fireworks are illuminating the foreground enough, it will be over-exposed and you'll need to use a faster shutter.


              • If the fireworks are very intense, you might find that correct exposure of the foreground over-exposes the fireworks because more than one is going off in the same place of the image. In that case, you'll probably have to use a faster shutter to decrease the number of fireworks in each shot, so reducing the chance of them overlapping. Unfortunately, that will underexpose the foreground, though you can try to bring that up in post.



              One helpful thing about fireworks is that you can get away with a certain amount of overexposure. They're bright, and they're bright colours, and a little overexposure will still look natural. A bit more overexposure might change the colour or even turn them white, but that can still look fine.






              share|improve this answer























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                4 Answers
                4






                active

                oldest

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                4 Answers
                4






                active

                oldest

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                active

                oldest

                votes






                active

                oldest

                votes









                3














                Use a tripod, take a shot of surroundings during an intermission (or even better, at dusk, before the fireworks start), and then shoot the fireworks. Blend the images in post production (this is a case where accurate overlap isn't even necessary).






                share|improve this answer




























                  3














                  Use a tripod, take a shot of surroundings during an intermission (or even better, at dusk, before the fireworks start), and then shoot the fireworks. Blend the images in post production (this is a case where accurate overlap isn't even necessary).






                  share|improve this answer


























                    3












                    3








                    3







                    Use a tripod, take a shot of surroundings during an intermission (or even better, at dusk, before the fireworks start), and then shoot the fireworks. Blend the images in post production (this is a case where accurate overlap isn't even necessary).






                    share|improve this answer













                    Use a tripod, take a shot of surroundings during an intermission (or even better, at dusk, before the fireworks start), and then shoot the fireworks. Blend the images in post production (this is a case where accurate overlap isn't even necessary).







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered 8 hours ago









                    xenoidxenoid

                    3,8161519




                    3,8161519

























                        3














                        There are many ways to tackle fireworks. A lot of it is experimental.



                        I found that I get near perfect handheld results with a 22mm to 35mm lens at around f/2.0 or f/2.8, ISO800 to ISO1250 and a shutter speed of 1/30 to 1/50. I keep the camera on Servo with continuous shooting.



                        It allows for shots that have the light streaks but keeps the highlights just below the point where they are completely blown out.



                        Any longer than 1/30 sec, I find that the highlights become unrecoverable.



                        Here are some cropped examples captured handheld on a Canon EOS-M(2012) with the above settings at Disney from the middle of a massive crowd, strollers and kids all over the place. In other words, no space for a tripod.



                        and the biggest secret that I just remembered, click after the explosion! that way you avoid the bright blownout explosion and capture just the streaks.



                        enter image description here



                        enter image description here



                        enter image description here






                        share|improve this answer






























                          3














                          There are many ways to tackle fireworks. A lot of it is experimental.



                          I found that I get near perfect handheld results with a 22mm to 35mm lens at around f/2.0 or f/2.8, ISO800 to ISO1250 and a shutter speed of 1/30 to 1/50. I keep the camera on Servo with continuous shooting.



                          It allows for shots that have the light streaks but keeps the highlights just below the point where they are completely blown out.



                          Any longer than 1/30 sec, I find that the highlights become unrecoverable.



                          Here are some cropped examples captured handheld on a Canon EOS-M(2012) with the above settings at Disney from the middle of a massive crowd, strollers and kids all over the place. In other words, no space for a tripod.



                          and the biggest secret that I just remembered, click after the explosion! that way you avoid the bright blownout explosion and capture just the streaks.



                          enter image description here



                          enter image description here



                          enter image description here






                          share|improve this answer




























                            3












                            3








                            3







                            There are many ways to tackle fireworks. A lot of it is experimental.



                            I found that I get near perfect handheld results with a 22mm to 35mm lens at around f/2.0 or f/2.8, ISO800 to ISO1250 and a shutter speed of 1/30 to 1/50. I keep the camera on Servo with continuous shooting.



                            It allows for shots that have the light streaks but keeps the highlights just below the point where they are completely blown out.



                            Any longer than 1/30 sec, I find that the highlights become unrecoverable.



                            Here are some cropped examples captured handheld on a Canon EOS-M(2012) with the above settings at Disney from the middle of a massive crowd, strollers and kids all over the place. In other words, no space for a tripod.



                            and the biggest secret that I just remembered, click after the explosion! that way you avoid the bright blownout explosion and capture just the streaks.



                            enter image description here



                            enter image description here



                            enter image description here






                            share|improve this answer















                            There are many ways to tackle fireworks. A lot of it is experimental.



                            I found that I get near perfect handheld results with a 22mm to 35mm lens at around f/2.0 or f/2.8, ISO800 to ISO1250 and a shutter speed of 1/30 to 1/50. I keep the camera on Servo with continuous shooting.



                            It allows for shots that have the light streaks but keeps the highlights just below the point where they are completely blown out.



                            Any longer than 1/30 sec, I find that the highlights become unrecoverable.



                            Here are some cropped examples captured handheld on a Canon EOS-M(2012) with the above settings at Disney from the middle of a massive crowd, strollers and kids all over the place. In other words, no space for a tripod.



                            and the biggest secret that I just remembered, click after the explosion! that way you avoid the bright blownout explosion and capture just the streaks.



                            enter image description here



                            enter image description here



                            enter image description here







                            share|improve this answer














                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer








                            edited 7 hours ago

























                            answered 8 hours ago









                            Abdul QuraishiAbdul Quraishi

                            3,86721024




                            3,86721024























                                1














                                These were taken with a Canon 700D with a 22 mm lens f/10 2,5 sec ISO 200



                                I had the camera set on a tripod and I was shooting with a remote control continuously leaving 1/2 seconds the camera cool before the next shot regardless of what was happening in front of me. Most of the shots showed nothing remarkable, but I got several nice shots.



                                June 24 2017, St. John's day, Turin, Italy



                                June 24 2017, St. John's day, Turin, Italy






                                share|improve this answer








                                New contributor




                                Andrea Mori is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                Check out our Code of Conduct.





















                                • Damn this looks awesome!

                                  – return true
                                  3 hours ago
















                                1














                                These were taken with a Canon 700D with a 22 mm lens f/10 2,5 sec ISO 200



                                I had the camera set on a tripod and I was shooting with a remote control continuously leaving 1/2 seconds the camera cool before the next shot regardless of what was happening in front of me. Most of the shots showed nothing remarkable, but I got several nice shots.



                                June 24 2017, St. John's day, Turin, Italy



                                June 24 2017, St. John's day, Turin, Italy






                                share|improve this answer








                                New contributor




                                Andrea Mori is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                Check out our Code of Conduct.





















                                • Damn this looks awesome!

                                  – return true
                                  3 hours ago














                                1












                                1








                                1







                                These were taken with a Canon 700D with a 22 mm lens f/10 2,5 sec ISO 200



                                I had the camera set on a tripod and I was shooting with a remote control continuously leaving 1/2 seconds the camera cool before the next shot regardless of what was happening in front of me. Most of the shots showed nothing remarkable, but I got several nice shots.



                                June 24 2017, St. John's day, Turin, Italy



                                June 24 2017, St. John's day, Turin, Italy






                                share|improve this answer








                                New contributor




                                Andrea Mori is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                Check out our Code of Conduct.










                                These were taken with a Canon 700D with a 22 mm lens f/10 2,5 sec ISO 200



                                I had the camera set on a tripod and I was shooting with a remote control continuously leaving 1/2 seconds the camera cool before the next shot regardless of what was happening in front of me. Most of the shots showed nothing remarkable, but I got several nice shots.



                                June 24 2017, St. John's day, Turin, Italy



                                June 24 2017, St. John's day, Turin, Italy







                                share|improve this answer








                                New contributor




                                Andrea Mori is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                share|improve this answer



                                share|improve this answer






                                New contributor




                                Andrea Mori is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                answered 6 hours ago









                                Andrea MoriAndrea Mori

                                1113




                                1113




                                New contributor




                                Andrea Mori is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                Check out our Code of Conduct.





                                New contributor





                                Andrea Mori is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                Check out our Code of Conduct.






                                Andrea Mori is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                Check out our Code of Conduct.













                                • Damn this looks awesome!

                                  – return true
                                  3 hours ago



















                                • Damn this looks awesome!

                                  – return true
                                  3 hours ago

















                                Damn this looks awesome!

                                – return true
                                3 hours ago





                                Damn this looks awesome!

                                – return true
                                3 hours ago











                                0














                                Think about what happens in a fireworks display. Essentially, the sky is black. Within the sky, a series of bright lights turn themselves on and then off in random places. The important thing to realise is that each firework is its own shutter! You need to set your ISO and aperture so that each firework's "natural shutter" results in a correct exposure of that firework. You can then leave the camera's shutter open for more or less as long as you want, and each firework that appears during that time will be added to the image, correctly exposed. If you leave the shutter open too long, multiple fireworks may go off in the same spot, which will over-expose.



                                I've found that something like f/11 and ISO-100 (fireworks are bright!) works well; if the fireworks are farther away, a wider aperture might be needed, as less of their light will be reaching you. Manual focus because you don't want the camera hunting trying to focus on the black sky, and the aperture's narrow enough, and the fireworks far enough away, that you'll have plenty of depth of field. Manual exposure mode, too. Tripod, of course.



                                If you're shooting fireworks just against the sky, use bulb mode, so you can start the exposure when something interesting is happening and stop when you think you've caught enough. If you're shooting with a foreground, choose whatever shutter speed gives a the exposure you want on that foreground – unfortunately, that means you can no longer choose how many fireworks you get in each shot. Make sure you figure out that exposure before the fireworks start.



                                Check the first few exposures, as you'll probably need to adjust.




                                • If your initial guess of aperture and ISO were wrong for this fireworks display, you'll need to adjust to get them correctly exposed and you'll need to make the corresponding adjustment to the shutter speed so that the foreground exposure remains correct.


                                • If the fireworks are illuminating the foreground enough, it will be over-exposed and you'll need to use a faster shutter.


                                • If the fireworks are very intense, you might find that correct exposure of the foreground over-exposes the fireworks because more than one is going off in the same place of the image. In that case, you'll probably have to use a faster shutter to decrease the number of fireworks in each shot, so reducing the chance of them overlapping. Unfortunately, that will underexpose the foreground, though you can try to bring that up in post.



                                One helpful thing about fireworks is that you can get away with a certain amount of overexposure. They're bright, and they're bright colours, and a little overexposure will still look natural. A bit more overexposure might change the colour or even turn them white, but that can still look fine.






                                share|improve this answer




























                                  0














                                  Think about what happens in a fireworks display. Essentially, the sky is black. Within the sky, a series of bright lights turn themselves on and then off in random places. The important thing to realise is that each firework is its own shutter! You need to set your ISO and aperture so that each firework's "natural shutter" results in a correct exposure of that firework. You can then leave the camera's shutter open for more or less as long as you want, and each firework that appears during that time will be added to the image, correctly exposed. If you leave the shutter open too long, multiple fireworks may go off in the same spot, which will over-expose.



                                  I've found that something like f/11 and ISO-100 (fireworks are bright!) works well; if the fireworks are farther away, a wider aperture might be needed, as less of their light will be reaching you. Manual focus because you don't want the camera hunting trying to focus on the black sky, and the aperture's narrow enough, and the fireworks far enough away, that you'll have plenty of depth of field. Manual exposure mode, too. Tripod, of course.



                                  If you're shooting fireworks just against the sky, use bulb mode, so you can start the exposure when something interesting is happening and stop when you think you've caught enough. If you're shooting with a foreground, choose whatever shutter speed gives a the exposure you want on that foreground – unfortunately, that means you can no longer choose how many fireworks you get in each shot. Make sure you figure out that exposure before the fireworks start.



                                  Check the first few exposures, as you'll probably need to adjust.




                                  • If your initial guess of aperture and ISO were wrong for this fireworks display, you'll need to adjust to get them correctly exposed and you'll need to make the corresponding adjustment to the shutter speed so that the foreground exposure remains correct.


                                  • If the fireworks are illuminating the foreground enough, it will be over-exposed and you'll need to use a faster shutter.


                                  • If the fireworks are very intense, you might find that correct exposure of the foreground over-exposes the fireworks because more than one is going off in the same place of the image. In that case, you'll probably have to use a faster shutter to decrease the number of fireworks in each shot, so reducing the chance of them overlapping. Unfortunately, that will underexpose the foreground, though you can try to bring that up in post.



                                  One helpful thing about fireworks is that you can get away with a certain amount of overexposure. They're bright, and they're bright colours, and a little overexposure will still look natural. A bit more overexposure might change the colour or even turn them white, but that can still look fine.






                                  share|improve this answer


























                                    0












                                    0








                                    0







                                    Think about what happens in a fireworks display. Essentially, the sky is black. Within the sky, a series of bright lights turn themselves on and then off in random places. The important thing to realise is that each firework is its own shutter! You need to set your ISO and aperture so that each firework's "natural shutter" results in a correct exposure of that firework. You can then leave the camera's shutter open for more or less as long as you want, and each firework that appears during that time will be added to the image, correctly exposed. If you leave the shutter open too long, multiple fireworks may go off in the same spot, which will over-expose.



                                    I've found that something like f/11 and ISO-100 (fireworks are bright!) works well; if the fireworks are farther away, a wider aperture might be needed, as less of their light will be reaching you. Manual focus because you don't want the camera hunting trying to focus on the black sky, and the aperture's narrow enough, and the fireworks far enough away, that you'll have plenty of depth of field. Manual exposure mode, too. Tripod, of course.



                                    If you're shooting fireworks just against the sky, use bulb mode, so you can start the exposure when something interesting is happening and stop when you think you've caught enough. If you're shooting with a foreground, choose whatever shutter speed gives a the exposure you want on that foreground – unfortunately, that means you can no longer choose how many fireworks you get in each shot. Make sure you figure out that exposure before the fireworks start.



                                    Check the first few exposures, as you'll probably need to adjust.




                                    • If your initial guess of aperture and ISO were wrong for this fireworks display, you'll need to adjust to get them correctly exposed and you'll need to make the corresponding adjustment to the shutter speed so that the foreground exposure remains correct.


                                    • If the fireworks are illuminating the foreground enough, it will be over-exposed and you'll need to use a faster shutter.


                                    • If the fireworks are very intense, you might find that correct exposure of the foreground over-exposes the fireworks because more than one is going off in the same place of the image. In that case, you'll probably have to use a faster shutter to decrease the number of fireworks in each shot, so reducing the chance of them overlapping. Unfortunately, that will underexpose the foreground, though you can try to bring that up in post.



                                    One helpful thing about fireworks is that you can get away with a certain amount of overexposure. They're bright, and they're bright colours, and a little overexposure will still look natural. A bit more overexposure might change the colour or even turn them white, but that can still look fine.






                                    share|improve this answer













                                    Think about what happens in a fireworks display. Essentially, the sky is black. Within the sky, a series of bright lights turn themselves on and then off in random places. The important thing to realise is that each firework is its own shutter! You need to set your ISO and aperture so that each firework's "natural shutter" results in a correct exposure of that firework. You can then leave the camera's shutter open for more or less as long as you want, and each firework that appears during that time will be added to the image, correctly exposed. If you leave the shutter open too long, multiple fireworks may go off in the same spot, which will over-expose.



                                    I've found that something like f/11 and ISO-100 (fireworks are bright!) works well; if the fireworks are farther away, a wider aperture might be needed, as less of their light will be reaching you. Manual focus because you don't want the camera hunting trying to focus on the black sky, and the aperture's narrow enough, and the fireworks far enough away, that you'll have plenty of depth of field. Manual exposure mode, too. Tripod, of course.



                                    If you're shooting fireworks just against the sky, use bulb mode, so you can start the exposure when something interesting is happening and stop when you think you've caught enough. If you're shooting with a foreground, choose whatever shutter speed gives a the exposure you want on that foreground – unfortunately, that means you can no longer choose how many fireworks you get in each shot. Make sure you figure out that exposure before the fireworks start.



                                    Check the first few exposures, as you'll probably need to adjust.




                                    • If your initial guess of aperture and ISO were wrong for this fireworks display, you'll need to adjust to get them correctly exposed and you'll need to make the corresponding adjustment to the shutter speed so that the foreground exposure remains correct.


                                    • If the fireworks are illuminating the foreground enough, it will be over-exposed and you'll need to use a faster shutter.


                                    • If the fireworks are very intense, you might find that correct exposure of the foreground over-exposes the fireworks because more than one is going off in the same place of the image. In that case, you'll probably have to use a faster shutter to decrease the number of fireworks in each shot, so reducing the chance of them overlapping. Unfortunately, that will underexpose the foreground, though you can try to bring that up in post.



                                    One helpful thing about fireworks is that you can get away with a certain amount of overexposure. They're bright, and they're bright colours, and a little overexposure will still look natural. A bit more overexposure might change the colour or even turn them white, but that can still look fine.







                                    share|improve this answer












                                    share|improve this answer



                                    share|improve this answer










                                    answered 3 hours ago









                                    David RicherbyDavid Richerby

                                    1,142918




                                    1,142918






























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