Fireworks

Here are some of mine... I guess it is time to buy a remote











If you made it this far, some not so good ones :-)

http://www.employees.org/~daftary/20030704/DSC02507.jpg
http://www.employees.org/~daftary/20030704/DSC02501.jpg
http://www.employees.org/~daftary/20030704/DSC02497.jpg
http://www.employees.org/~daftary/20030704/DSC02495.jpg
http://www.employees.org/~daftary/20030704/DSC02496.jpg

-Kuntal
I didn't know where they were going to be coming from ( I had to
run and change locations three times), so this was my test run. I
will be in a better position next time now that I know where they
come from:



So how did your's turn out?

--
Shay

My Sony F707 & F717 Gallery: http://www.shaystephens.com/portfolio.asp
My F717 Observations: http://www.shaystephens.com/f717.asp
 
I used a 30 sec exposure putting the card in front between bursts with the 10d
Would you be so kind as to explain what you mean by "putting the
card in front between bursts"? Thanks!

Nancy
I held a piece of cardboard up against the front of the lens inbetween bursts. This limited the exposure to just the bursts - in this way I eliminated the rocket trails up when I wanted to. Also eliminated the random spots of light when the burst was falling apart, and kept the overall shot from being overexposed. Cindy

--
CindyD or SarahD
If one of us is laughing, and the other one isn't, one of us must be wrong...
 
I don't usually like fireworks pics but the building, time of day and fireworks all compliment each other nicely. Great shot!
I didn't know where they were going to be coming from ( I had to
run and change locations three times), so this was my test run. I
will be in a better position next time now that I know where they
come from:



So how did your's turn out?

--
Shay

My Sony F707 & F717 Gallery: http://www.shaystephens.com/portfolio.asp
My F717 Observations: http://www.shaystephens.com/f717.asp
--
Michael Jones
Join the Infrared Ultraviolet Photography Group:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Digital_IR_UV_Photography_Tech
Join the DSC-V1 group
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/DSC-V1
Download McPic Photo Viewer (FREE) with IR Colorizer!:
http://www.customvb.net/sw/mcpic
 
Gads, I'm having the worst time keeping up with this forum. Thank you soooo much for answering my question. I guess what you did seems obvious now, but at the time I didn't think it could be that simple. Well, simple for someone with coordination. With my luck, I'd put the cardboard in front of the lens only while the bursts were happening. heh...

Thanks again!

Nancy

-------
I used a 30 sec exposure putting the card in front between bursts with the 10d
Would you be so kind as to explain what you mean by "putting the
card in front between bursts"? Thanks!

Nancy
I held a piece of cardboard up against the front of the lens
inbetween bursts. This limited the exposure to just the bursts -
in this way I eliminated the rocket trails up when I wanted to.
Also eliminated the random spots of light when the burst was
falling apart, and kept the overall shot from being overexposed.
Cindy

--
CindyD or SarahD
If one of us is laughing, and the other one isn't, one of us must
be wrong...
 
Very very nice.

Here's one of mine: http://mywpages.comcast.net/narendrakanar/pages/DSC01236.htm
I didn't know where they were going to be coming from ( I had to
run and change locations three times), so this was my test run. I
will be in a better position next time now that I know where they
come from:



So how did your's turn out?

--
Shay

My Sony F707 & F717 Gallery: http://www.shaystephens.com/portfolio.asp
My F717 Observations: http://www.shaystephens.com/f717.asp
 

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