Friday, January 22, 2010

Great Photos With Your Digital Slr Very Helpful! Best Settings For A Digital Slr For A Live Band?

Best settings for a digital slr for a live band? - great photos with your digital slr very helpful!

I love pictures, but I do not see very well, the best settings for low light.

I have a DSLR and would like to be able to beautiful photos at concerts and live music.

As the exposure time, ISO and all that is best for low light conditions ...... or conversely, the very bright stage lights?

Other suggestions for photographing under these conditions?

Thank you!

3 comments:

PBIPhoto... said...

Get closer to the stage as possible. The later, the less light reaches you and your camera ...

Set the camera will zoom out to Av (aperture priority), and the opening (f / number, eg f / 4 or 2.8), then you can use the amount of light you see and then maximize it, such as speed shutter speed you need. If the light is low, you might need to use the manual focus.

When the lighting of the scene is the same as for the implementation, baled and then press the shutter halb When the shutter speed of less than 1 / 100 sec, change the ISO setting to a higher value (eg 200 to 400) . Check the shutter speed. Keep doing this until the shutter speed is 1 / 100 second or faster.

If you know that it slow down for sharp images at shutter speeds from good ISO can be a little lower, which (the noise looks like a button) on your images.

Karl W said...

There are already some good answers. I propose the creation of a fairly high as ISO 800, so can your shutter speed high enough to keep stopping the action (ie 1/125th or 1/60th at least). I also propose your white balance setting "incandescent", so that is the color of the light out to be true. With the light of day "and the WB settings, the colors are too red, because the stage lights are hot.

If you want to experiment with the flash, I want to see if you can be your camera to "slow sync" so that the shutter is left open and a little action in the form of confusion, but the gel to a jerky movement point. Pictures in May of this so very cold air taken. If you do this, the World Bank is back on "Flash" for this part of the subject receiving the flash quite natural, and some confusion is reddish.

Good luck!

Lisa said...

It is a night of camera settings, usually in the shape of the moon and the stars. In this way the shutter can be open longer, and looking for a cozy. However, the camera needs to be stable or to be super blurry.

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