hi, newbie here. just curious how do u achieve this effect on the water? handheld or tripod? exposure, iso etc?
thanks in advance, bros!
thanks in advance, bros!
1. Do NOT just link to someone else's pic without crediting them.
2. It's a very very very well-documented trick, it's even in most camera manuals. Try a google search for "smoky water effect"
for the rest who have contributed, thanks, I may use it when i visit Jurong Bird Park tomorrow...
hi, newbie here. just curious how do u achieve this effect on the water? handheld or tripod? exposure, iso etc?
thanks in advance, bros!
i tried on a sunny day with ND filter. with F20, ISO100.which effect?
clouds cannot be achieved with anything, they have to be there
if you're talking about water,
shutter speed is key, if you understand how iso/shutter speed/aperture work, to be honest, maybe do not even need nd filters, just stop down to f/19 or f/22 (diffraction is seriously overrated at times, depending on lens), iso lowest possible, and go bananas.
i tried on a sunny day with ND filter. with F20, ISO100.
still get overexposed pix.
2x ND filter will do the trick?
i tried on a sunny day with ND filter. with F20, ISO100.
still get overexposed pix.
2x ND filter will do the trick?
I think you need a tripod and GND filter. Set ISO to lowest, Tv priority and set shutter speed to 1 sec or so. If it is still over exposed, u may need ND filter.
Cheaper way is to do HDR image. Get different exposure image and blend together using photomatrix.
most important...
a shutter release cable if you want a sharp picture.