You've seen all those spectacular photographs of fireworks. Maybe you've even tried your hand at recording your local July 4th spectacular. But it's not easy to pull off with a standard point-and-shoot digital camera.
Here's what you need:
- A camera that lets you control shutter speed, ISO settings, and aperture settings of your photos. You'll want to set your shutter speed slow, to between 1 and 16 seconds depending on the amount of background light. You'll want to set your aperture relatively tight (around f/8 or so) to cut down on background light noise and prevent overexposure.
- Some point-and-shoot cameras come with a built-in "fireworks" mode especially designed for this situation. You'll have little luck if your camera is hard-wired to automatic settings for low light situations that don't include fireworks photo-taking.
- A tripod. Even with anti-shake technology, the long exposures you'll need to get really effective pictures require a steady hand--one steadier than yours. Bring a tripod, or at least a monopod, to steady your aim.
- Manual focus control is helpful. If you're using a digital SLR camera, use manual focus and set it to "infinity".
- Shoot at a wide angle, so you can get more of the sky. That way, you don't have to be constantly trying to point your camera toward where the fireworks are.
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