Wait what? If your shooting at night, or in a dimly lit room, this is an excellent technique. Set your camera to manual mode, or on a film range finder just set the following settings.
- Aperture Should be set to smallest setting (Highest F/Stop I.E. F/16)
- Shutter speed should be adjusted to the point where the meter registers +1/3 generally around 30seconds to 1 minute. On a manual film rangefinder set the camera to bulb, and hold it open for a count. If you have a shutter release this may help as well.
- Do it again. Not every shot is going to be blurred as much as you want it to be. Keep trying. You might try opening up an old cheap rangefinder like a Argus C3 and creating a pinhole camera, out of it, dragging exposure times from 60seconds to several minutes.
There are tons of things to try just go try.
Nice shot, and idea. I just learned a few cool things to do with the aperture, i'll have to give this one a try too. :)
ReplyDeleteGood Luck I really had good luck with this.
ReplyDeleteHey.. Really intriguing submit there you obtained.. But I’m fairly new in this things and I have a RF. I used to be asking yourself whether or not can it be achievable for that RF to make use of all people telephoto and zoom lenses this kind of as nikon?.. due to the fact i've a nikon mount adapter and I am even now deciding which lens to get..
ReplyDeleteRegards,
Nathalie
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