I’m back from my beach photo stop. I took my first long exposures with my new camera and lens! They are all 30 seconds, and they are all the same view as I didn’t bother moving the tripod much. Enjoy!
More photos coming soon!
I’m back from my beach photo stop. I took my first long exposures with my new camera and lens! They are all 30 seconds, and they are all the same view as I didn’t bother moving the tripod much. Enjoy!
More photos coming soon!
I can’t take the damn camera out of the damn bag without screwing the damn filter onto the damn lens and opening the damn shutter for 30 damn seconds.
The water seemed a little choppy as I was setting up, but it doesn’t seem much different. I mean, it’s nice and glassy and smooth and all, but it’s not a huge dramatic difference.

The wind did interesting things with the branches in the foreground, but that’s not really the goal. And it’s sort of distracting.

The water is pretty cool here, but I lost the shore to the shadow.

There was a ton of traffic on the bridge, all of which was blurred into oblivion. Sweet.

And with this we end the forth post I milked out of about 45 minutes of wandering around town. Sweet.

I finally did it. I’ve been living in Massachusetts for my whole life and I’d never watched the sun come up over the ocean. I’ve seen it go down over the Pacific ocean, but I’ve never seen it rise over the Atlantic.
Until today.
Sunrise was at 6:37am. I was standing on the beach with the camera on the tripod at about 6:15. What to do while I wait? How about play with some more 30 second exposures? Okay!
The sun was still below the horizon, but it was bright enough that I needed the neutral density filter. Without it, the pics were a white washout. With it, they were too dark. Oh well.
I was just goofing around, so I didn’t bother leveling the tripod when I changed the direction it was pointing in. That’s why the next too are a little like the old Batman TV show from the 60’s. Forgive me.
More pics to come…
I took my camera with me when I dropped the kids off this morning. I had a couple of hours before I had to punch into work, so I went to a little park along the Merrimack river so that I could play with some more 30 second exposure pics. There wasn’t much to work with as I don’t have a real tripod (the thing I have is only about 18 inches tall or so) and the river bank sloped down pretty severely on the few places that were clear of brush enough to get a pic through. There was also a lot of dog shit everywhere, sad to say. There was one spot with a set of wooden steps that formed a sort of boat launch. I sat my fat ass there (after checking to make sure it was feces free) and snapped off four pics. That’s it. I wasn’t really feeling it today.
Here they are…
Nothing special. It probably would have looked better if the sky weren’t clouded over. Maybe partly cloudy, blue sky with big puffy white clouds. Maybe it would have looked better with something like that reflecting off the river. Who knows. Maybe I’ll get a real tripod and try again. Who knows.
I went to Minuteman National Park in Concord, MA today to take some pics of the Concord River at the Old North Bridge. For those of you who never studied US History, that’s where the first shots in the American Revolution were fired.
I took some 30 second exposures, and some plain ol’ ordinary pics too. This post is for the 30 second deals.
It almost looks like the river is frozen. That is so cool.

And now we move to the other side of the bridge. I was kinda aiming blind on these. That explains the… leaning.

I promise you that this one is in fact a long exposure. Look at the leaves at the end of the branches. Click on the image (or any of these images) to view them at Flickr. You can blow them up there.

After this I drove from Concord to Billerica to take a few at the Middlesex Canal. Unfortunately, the iron fence surrounding the water fall made my little tiny gorilla pod pretty much useless. I tried a few anyway.

I think these long exposure thingies are wicked cool. I hope you don’t think they suck.
More pics to come later…
I went outside again this evening to watch the bird feeder. Not a single bird showed up. The jerks.
It was getting dark out there when I saw something crazy. A ghost in our back yard! Check out the proof!
It’s a ghostly apparition if I ever saw one. Who ya gonna call?
I turned the camera toward the woods and I got another view.
I came back to the bird feeder and there it was again! Ghostbusters and all that! WOOHOO
(nerdy things like this happen when you buy a nerd like me a new toy for his camera. 30 second exposures for everyone!)
I took my new neutral density filter to a couple of places around town today in the hopes of pulling off at least one decent 30 second exposure. The first stop was Forrest Lake. Of course, the sun was barely out and the water was fogged over. I gave it a shot anyway.
First I used the auto focus to focus in on a shot, then I turned the manual focus on so that the camera wouldn’t try to refocus when I took the shot. Next, I went into shutter priority and set it for the longest time possible, 30 seconds. If I had a remote shutter release I could leave it open longer, but I don’t so I can’t. Then I put on the filter. I was using the live view function on my Nikon D90 so I could clearly see that barely any light was getting through. Then I set the shutter delay to the lowest setting I know how to get, 10 seconds. That way I wouldn’t shake the camera when I pushed the shutter release.
Photographers, did I do that right? Should I have done anything different?
Here goes. I will try to post a shot without the filter in auto mode, and then one with the filter in shutter priority. The colors at the lake came out… weird on the long exposures. See for yourself.
The shutter speed on this one is 0.008 seconds.

The shutter speed on this one is 30 seconds, and it uses the filter. See what I mean about the colors?

You can see the effect of the long exposure on the water, but the water was calm enough this morning that it didn’t make that much of a difference to me. Here are some more…
I don’t have a before picture for this one. All you get is the 30 second shot.

The guy fishing by the beach (which was closed. I was on the boat launch) was the only other person in sight. I should just junk this one, the 30 second shot looks like the camera moved a bit. Nothing on the ground is in focus. Crap. I wanted to see what the effect of having a mostly stationary person in the shot would do. I still don’t really know.

This one looks better, but you sort of lose the fog.

I also took a boat load of plain old ordinary auto mode pics as well as this was the first time I had my Nikon with me at Forrest Lake. You’ll see those in a future post.
Now we move on to the Spicket Falls Dam. I love this place. This dam is literally why I wanted to buy this stupid little filter in the first place. The results were… okay I guess. I probably threw things off myself. I have a gorilla pod, which is a little bendable tripod thingie. I had the camera on it for all of these pics, but at the dam it was standing on a not-so-wide cement wall that seriously scared the hell out of me. I envisioned the whole kit just dropping off the side into the river where I would never be able to get to them. I ended up holding onto the shoulder strap for dear life while the shutter was open. I probably shook things up.
First we see the dam without the filter.

Now we see a couple of 30 second snaps.

Not so bad. The second one seems a little too fuzzy, but the first one isn’t a disaster. Like I said, I was really nervous about the camera sitting on the wall, so I was probably moving things around too much and throwing off the focus. Still, it’s not bad for my first day, right?
The next couple were also taken from the cement wall, but they were points down stream from the damn. The water was moving pretty fast here, and the effects are pretty dramatic in comparison to everything I’ve shown so far.

Look at the little chunk of cement jutting out on the right side of that picture. It’s not perfectly focused, but it’s close. Now this is what I had in mind when I bought this little thing!
Here’s another spot on the river, just before it turns and goes under Osgood Street. This has a little more of the river bank, so the effect seems even more drastic to me.

This is the best one so far, by far. The tree and the bank looks pretty clear. I like this one.

Next I followed the river walk across the road to a spot where you can get down to the water itself. I have only done this in the fall or early spring, so I wasn’t quite ready for the amount of plant growth, but I toughed it out. In this case the camera was on the gorilla pod, which was sitting on a tree stump. This worked the best, although I was still terrified of having the camera fall off.
I don’t think I actually took this while setting the focus. The rocks on the other side are clear, but the branch on my side of the river isn’t.

Now check out this bad boy. Both sides of the river are in focus, but the water is silky smooth happiness.

I didn’t set this one up at all. By this point I had reached the camera-falling-off-the-log panic threshold, so I just turned it to a different spot and clicked. It came out better than most of the other pictures.

So there you have it. My first foray into long exposures in the daytime. I wonder if this thing will solve the problem of moon pics too. When I point the camera at the moon I get a nice night sky with this great big overexposed blotch where the moon is supposed to be. I wonder if I put the filter on and just snap a few, will the moon look okay? Something else to try!
I almost feel like someone who knows what he’s doing (even though I clearly do not)!
I bought a Neutral Density Filter last week. I thought it was coming UPS tomorrow, but it came today.
It’s pouring rain outside right now, like Noah and the end of the world and all of that. There is a little pin hole sized leak in the gutter over our garage. When it rains the water comes streaming through that hole and makes a puddle on the side of the driveway. The dirt in that spot is eroding away at an alarming rate, but for today it served as a good place to test out the new filter!
It worked! WOOHOO!