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DPChallenge Forums >> Photography Discussion >> How to photograph lightning?
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05/22/2004 11:50:44 PM · #1
After 4 days of multiple T-Storms every day and a whole week of more storms coming, can anyone suggest good settings for attempting to photograph lighting with the Rebel (or any other DSLR I suppose.) Unfortunately I only have the kit lens still, but what other lenses would be good for such photography also?

Message edited by author 2004-05-22 23:51:11.
05/23/2004 12:14:31 AM · #2
I guess ISO 100 and a 30 second exposure is good, just like the one in "Opposites".

Good luck...
05/23/2004 12:15:00 AM · #3
This storm is freaking INSANE!!!!

I got 5 shots of the lightning - none are spectacular. 5 is up from 2 last time, though! :)

Set long shutters and point the right way. It'll come to you instead of trying to catch it.

M
05/23/2004 12:26:41 AM · #4
Originally posted by mavrik:

This storm is freaking INSANE!!!!

I got 5 shots of the lightning - none are spectacular. 5 is up from 2 last time, though! :)

Set long shutters and point the right way. It'll come to you instead of trying to catch it.

M


Post something!
05/23/2004 12:29:56 AM · #5
As I said, nothing spectacular - haven't dl'd yet. Thinking of going back out. Anyways, nothing like BikeRacer's shot on front page.

M
05/23/2004 12:33:13 AM · #6
The kit lens actually will do just fine. Set for moderately wide angle if the lightning is close, and around f/5.6 to f/8. Use a tripod, and use a remote if you have one.
I usually use "bulb" and wait for the initial flash, then trigger the shutter quickly.
My best catches still don't hold up to some of what's been posted here before. I'm hoping ot get some good stuff this summer.
05/23/2004 12:33:58 AM · #7
30 seconds worked great for me. Probably want to set the exposure compensation to -1.0 or so. I think I shot manual at f/9. It's important to stop down with the kit lens.

Good Luck!!
05/23/2004 12:34:23 AM · #8
look at kirbic in his fancy purple shirt, and those shades....
05/23/2004 12:37:10 AM · #9
Originally posted by kirbic:

The kit lens actually will do just fine. Set for moderately wide angle if the lightning is close, and around f/5.6 to f/8. Use a tripod, and use a remote if you have one.
I usually use "bulb" and wait for the initial flash, then trigger the shutter quickly.
My best catches still don't hold up to some of what's been posted here before. I'm hoping ot get some good stuff this summer.


You mean you leave the shutter open until the flash then you release it? I don't have a remote, so I just use the 30 second max and use the self-timer mode.

Have you gotten good night shots with longer exposures? Does noise start to creep in after 30 seconds?
05/23/2004 07:12:34 AM · #10
Check this thread out from last week as well .....

//www.dpchallenge.com/forum.php?action=read&FORUM_THREAD_ID=91120

There are also a lot of great sites out there dedicated to lightning photos which might help.
05/23/2004 11:53:39 AM · #11
Get one of these - then you can take pictures of lightning during the day too...

//www.luminous-landscape.com/reviews/lightning.shtml
05/23/2004 01:31:16 PM · #12
Ron, I'm still new to photographing lightning, but here's some of my EXIF.

Photograph Details
Date Taken: 2004-05-13 23:04:04
Make: Canon
Model: Canon EOS 10D
Size: 554x369
Bytes: 85059
Aperture: f/3.5
ISO: 100
Focal Length: 28mm (guess: 164mm in 35mm)
Exposure Time: 15s (15/1)
JPEG Quality: 3
Exposure Bias: 0
SensingMethod: One-chip color sensor
ColorSpace: sRGB


I used the shutter priority set to 15 seconds with ISO 100. I started at ISO 200 but changed that down to 100 after only a few shots. After the 15 seconds was up, I immediately fired again. I used my kit lens, the 28-90mm, set at 28mm. The hardest part for me was focusing. I basically manually focused on something I thought was equally as far away as the lightning and then hoped for the best. I got lucky.

The biggest thing is patience. Pick an active spot and stay there. If you can get yourself up on a hill, even better. I live on a large hill overlooking a valley that leads down to a lake so I see south, west and north. It's really nice because I can stand out under the patio, stay dry (usually), and see a lot. The hill in the lightning shots I took is about a 1/2 mile away. The lightning seemed to shoot behind it, so I'm guessing it was about a mile or two away. I took about 150 shots and wound up with the 7 that are on my site.

Here in NY we've been getting the IA, IL, and MI storms as well. We had quite a storm last night; we were in the tornado watch box. They had spotted rotation about 30 miles northwest of here, but it continued east. There was a lot of lightning up that way, but not many bolts. Most of the lightning was up above the (low) clouds so all I saw was large flashes. I think I may have 2-3 shots but I haven't viewed them on the computer yet.

Ron, keep trying! Don't get frustrated. It's mostly luck. If you can pick the right direction to face, then you've got it made. Don't move directions frequently because you'll almost always miss the shot!

Good luck and I hope to see some shots from you and the rest. Just be careful!

Jen

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