quick D70 exposure question
quick D70 exposure question
Author
Discussion

white_van_man

Original Poster:

3,848 posts

270 months

Thursday 12th May 2005
quotequote all
How do i do long ie 5-10 min exposures on a D70 i would look in my manual but i cant find it at the moment

beano500

20,854 posts

296 months

Thursday 12th May 2005
quotequote all
Er - not gone there myself yet, but do you set it to "bulb" and use the remote plip thingy? One plip for open sesame and again for close sesame?


beano500

20,854 posts

296 months

Thursday 12th May 2005
quotequote all
BTW 5-10 minutes isn't really a "quick" exposure! Well, not unless your name's Fox Talbot or Daguerre

fergusd

1,250 posts

291 months

Thursday 12th May 2005
quotequote all
You'll need to use a remote control, the cam will do up to 30 seconds exposures itself, but for longer than 30 secs you need to use a wee IR remote thingy, press once to open the shutter, once to close . . .

Fd

blondemoment

712 posts

275 months

Friday 13th May 2005
quotequote all
white_van_man said:
How do i do long ie 5-10 min exposures on a D70 i would look in my manual but i cant find it at the moment


I'm glad you asked! I've been wondering that too!!!

fazz81

324 posts

256 months

Friday 13th May 2005
quotequote all
I think you can set it to bulb and press the shutter release button to open the again to close.

But the remote control is better as it elemenates shake.

fatrabbit

3 posts

248 months

Friday 13th May 2005
quotequote all
Yeah - buy the remote, set your camera to operate with it (easy, it's in the manual) and click.

Annoyingly, the camera sets itself back to using the normal shutter release button after a few minutes, so look in the manual on how to adjust how long it waits before doing this.

You can see some photos of mine with this method here : www.werebunny.com/gfx .

fazz81

324 posts

256 months

Friday 13th May 2005
quotequote all
that was annoying me as well, didn't realise you could change it to wait longer.

Cheers

beano500

20,854 posts

296 months

Friday 13th May 2005
quotequote all
Well you're all right (me too)

See manual on pages: 83 and 107

You get 30 minutes max using the remote plip (or as long as your finger can stand it if you hold the release down! )

Course the workaround is that if the battery fails the shutter will stay open






Oh and RTFM!

beano500

20,854 posts

296 months

Friday 13th May 2005
quotequote all
fatrabbit said:
You can see some photos of mine with this method here : www.werebunny.com/gfx .
Hey Fatrabbit!!!

start a new thread so that your images can be sure to get to a wider PH Photodude audience - they're really inspiring!!!!

fazz81

324 posts

256 months

Friday 13th May 2005
quotequote all
beano500 said:

Oh and RTFM!



you'll want us to be asking directions next!

>> Edited by fazz81 on Friday 13th May 12:41

_dobbo_

14,619 posts

269 months

Friday 13th May 2005
quotequote all
beano500 said:

fatrabbit said:
You can see some photos of mine with this method here : <a href="www.werebunny.com/gfx">www.werebunny.com/gfx</a> .

Hey Fatrabbit!!!

start a new thread so that your images can be sure to get to a wider PH Photodude audience - they're really inspiring!!!!


Indeed fatrabbit post a thread of your own, and also get yourself entered in the competetion thread, surely this one fits "industrial" and plus it's farking amazing!!!! How was it done?


CVP

2,799 posts

296 months

Friday 13th May 2005
quotequote all
_dobbo_ said:


Indeed fatrabbit post a thread of your own, and also get yourself entered in the competetion thread, surely this one fits "industrial" and plus it's farking amazing!!!! How was it done?


Great image, most creative use of lighting and subject.

I think it's done as follows;

1. Camera on tripod with long exposure of scene
2. Put red gel over torch
3. Walk round the scene moving the torch in the pattern you want to see in the finished image

As you are constantly moving and only in the same place in the image for such a short period you don't record, but as the torch is so bright compared to the ambient light it does leave it's trail.

Correct ??

Chris