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    The Awesome Power of Lightning

    January 31st, 2007 • Bookmark on | del.icio.us | Digg It | Reddit
    BY AMY RENFREY

    Getting great shots of forked lightning is not as difficult as you would think or have been led to believe.

    As a digital photography teacher, I can honestly say that the first thing people do is buy way too much equipment for this exercise. You really just need a few simple things — a camera and a tripod are the main things.

     

    The main challenge when taking lightning shots is where to position yourself. I’ve had many a frustrating time, in the early days of my photography, trying to get the best angle, the best position only to find I had the camera pointed at the completely wrong part of the sky. And some of my lightning exposures were all wrong. I was thinking it was as hard as trying to predict a horse race with a crystal ball… until I worked out the logic of it all and it started to become a lot of fun!

    The first thing to keep in mind is to make sure your shutter is open. Lightning is sharp, short and sweet. It’s important to get the most out of the long, open shutter speed by leaving it open for a long time. You can do this with confidence on a really black night, such as being in the country on a dark night without any city lights or too many clouds around for the light to bounce off. In the country, you may have the freedom to leave the shutter open for as long as 60 seconds.

    In the city, however, it’s a bit different. What tends to happen is that due to other light in the atmosphere — light from buildings, streets and cars — this scene turns out much brighter with a 60 second shutter speed.

    A quick way to get great lightning shots is to find a good place to set up where you know lightning is either happening or is about to happen. Take your tripod, camera and shutter release cable. The great thing about a shutter release cable is that once the lightning has struck, there is no need to keep the shutter open — simply press it and the shutter will close.

    Try setting your aperture to about an f/8 or so and leaving the shutter open from anywhere between 10 seconds to 60 seconds (Setting B). Set your IS0 at 100, set the focus to infinity and wait.
     

    Safety

    Photography is intensely fun and incredibly educational and creative, but it’s not worth risking your life for. As much as it’s a beautiful spectacle, its much wiser to stay well away from lightning. It’s carrying enough energy to give your house power for two months solid, so be careful!

    Amy Renfrey is the author of Digital Photography Success which shows you how to take excellent photos with your “ordinary” digital camera, in perfect clarity and superb detail and depth, every single time as if a professional photographer took them!

    Posted in Technique |

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