Using Long Exposure to Photograph Water
Tony SweetDescription
The day is cloudy, and the ocean is at high tide. Tony sets up his tripod along the beach. Using the long exposure, he captures what the locals call the boneyard, bare trees stuck out in the ocean caused by beach erosion. Using various neutral density filters, he shoots at multi-second interludes at a high f stop. The result? The waves turn creamy and smooth while the dark, bare trees remain stationary. He then shows you how to shoot various wave formations in horizontal and vertical formats.
Tony takes you into his post-production suite where he makes editing adjustments to his images. Because the day was gray and the skies cloudy, the photographs came out evenly lighted. These problems can be fixed with proper editing. You will learn how to add contrast for depth, darken the skies to bring out details, and make white balance adjustments to bring out your color and tone preferences. He even shows you what he calls messing around, experimenting with vignetting and tonal range to add drama.
Travel to the shores of South Carolina with pro shooter and editor Tony Sweet as he guides you through the complete process of shooting long-exposure photography.
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This video: Using Long Exposure to Photograph Water
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