Today i bought a Nikon d500 SLR with a 55-200mm lens and i want to have a go at taking some photographs at some rock gigs. Can anybody give me any tips on what settings to have it on, flash, iso etc please.
If you do, ISO 1600, aperture as low as it will go, you wont be allowed to use flash and it looks god awful anyway.
pretty much...
oh, don't get in the way of everyone else in the pit (it's pretty self-regulating fortunately) if you do manage to get into decent size venues, and WEAR EARPLUGS.
My view is that it is second only to wildlife in terms of having to really know your gear and the demands on it.
I could be wrong though.....
Yep, elbows are god send for the few who dont quite "get it".
Take the camera out of auto mode.
I only shoot fully manual at gigs, as depending on how 'clever' your camera is and what metering mode you're in etc, something as simple as a stage light changing colour temp will throw the exposure miles off and ruin the pic in Aperature priority.
pick your shots.
Best advice here, and also the hardest to do as a beginner.
As someone who's only shot around 10 gigs, I've already realised the importance of being selective in what to shoot..
It's SO easy to get carried away and find yourself taking 200+ pics.. which just makes it a ballache during workflow to whittle it down to 'keepers'.
Sorry guys i did mean a Nikon D5000, i am going to sound like a real numpty here but how do you turn off the flash?
Put a piece of insulation tape round it so that it can't pop up.
Probably a more technical solution as well, but do this too, don't want it accidentally coming up.
On the flip side if the singer dives in the crowd and there is no light put onto him, it accidentally popping up and firing a couple amongst the hundreds of others, well things can happen
Neither of those will be fast enough really. You'll not get a shutter speed fast enough to get anything sharp. Ideally you need an f/2.8 or faster lens.
Not really no, unless you are very lucky.
I still dont see how you intend to get this equipment into the venue, or indeed use it. Have you read the advice above about knowing your gear inside out?
I am a music journalist i review gigs for a living, so will have no problem getting my equipment in. I am trying to incorporate photography into reviewing gigs.
and thus the decline of the professional continues further...
hire a professional.
but yeah, you'll get the occasional good shot with the 18-55. Keep it wide and close, and wait for the light to be good. Pick your moments and hit the shutter.
1/60th
iso 1600.
raw+jpg normal
active d lighting off
Picture control and high iso NR?
Do you want to just pass Dave your camera..?![]()
Do you want to just pass Dave your camera..?![]()
beat me to it... the button on top of the camera's the one to press....
high iso NR off, do it in lightroom instead.
picture style....doesn't matter. 'vivid' will give you punchy jpgs if you want.
C'mon, lighten up..you've been given some top quality advice in this thread.
It just seems that you're now going down the menu screen and asking how to set every single one.