Night shots

nikonvr

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brian
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Hi I’m off to Spain in a couple weeks can you give me any tips on night shots settings etc up until now I keep my camera (nikonD50) on auto and keep my fingers crossed we intend visiting the Alhambra palace at night plus other stuff.
thanks Brian
 
Hi and welcome to TP Brian.

For night shots – Take camera off auto, set desired aperture and use shutter priority – use tripod and cable release.
 
If you like to shoot on Auto - then continue to do so, but after taking your night shot review it in the viewer - if it is overexposed, then simply use the exposure compensation buttonand command wheel to dial in a stop of underexposure.

Say you get your shot and it comes out too light when you have a quick look - don't panic, just dial in "-1" in the exp comp (read manual!) on my camera the exp com button is right next to the shutter release. Turn the command wheel until the top LCD shows -1EV. Take another shot - this time it will be a bit darker. Still not enough? A bit more exp comp, so tweek it to "-1.3" and shoot again - delete your first washed out pic to save space on the card. You now have two to compare. One at -1 and one at -1.3. Each time you improve the exposre, you can delete the poorer one. Saves a huge amount of computer time back home!

If the opposite is true and your picture is too dark, simply set the exposure compensation to + side, so you would start at +1EV, then try +1.3....and so on until you got a good exposure. To set the exposure comp only takes as long as pressing the shutter button when you are used ot using it. Practise before you go on anything - buses in the street outside if you like! It doesn't matter, it is only so you can see what happens when you use the exp comp facility - quick and eas and just like using M mode! You will soon be able to guess the amount of exp comp to use as your starting point pretty accurately according to the scene - experience helps but it is still just an educated guess. The more you do it, the better your guess becomes!
 
That's good avice from Lensflare. I wouldn't have thought of doing it like that, but it makes a lot of sense.

Here's an alternative which might help. From experience I've found that when photographing illuminated buildings there's a set of exposure settings which just seem to work. All the pictures below were taken at ISO 100, f/8, 5 seconds. If you can learn how to put your camera in manual mode, these settings will probably get the job done.


(Click to see larger versions in my SmugMug gallery.)
 
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