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Will Femia is a Weblog enthusiast who, through good fortune and dumb luck, was introduced to the form as his position as chat producer for MSNBC.com careered into obsolescence. On any given day, Will can be found having already spent an unhealthy amount of time squinting at a computer screen.

Send a message to Will at spotter@msnbc.com



Lightning porn

Posted: Thursday, June 28, 2007 10:19 AM by Will Femia

Big storms hit NYC last night, giving me another chance to try to take some lightning photos.  These are the best two I got.
Lightning porn

Lightning porn

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Comments

Do you use a slow shutter or keep your shutter open? Having grown up in Florida, I'd often see photos with the shutters left open showing a sky filled with lightning.  Pretty cool trick.
Patrick, yes, I had it set to stay open for 5 seconds, which is pretty long.  Most of the how-tos I've read have said that the only way to do it is to go with a long exposure and just keep snapping and as long as the storm is active enough you're bound to catch something.

The other side of the long exposure equation is to go with the lowest ISO you've got.

I'm also learning that just because there are bright flashes, that doesn't mean you'll get good bolts.  If there's too much cloud cover, the most you get is a shot that looks like you used a giant flash on the whole scene.  Last night I had to get my shots as the storm approached because once it hit there was too much rain/clouds to get a clear bolt.
Nice catches!  The second one would look even better if you crop the building on the left out so it doesn't steal focus...might be easier to see the faint branches that are spiking off the bolt as well.
Thanks to google "streetmaps," I can easily find Will's house now. Of course, google also tells me that I'd need to drive 1231 miles to even get close...so your anonymity is safe for now. Until google releases its googleporter - the first web-based teleportation device (runs on the iPhone too).
Recycling plastic into oil and gas:

http://environment.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn12141&feedId=online-news_rss20

This must either be a hoax or crazy expensive.  Otherwise, wouln't it be all over the news?
It's funny, I was wondering about the shots too but settled on the idea of you frantically turning from one area of the sky to another saying "Damn! Missed again!".
Alex, I'm counting on crappy download bandwidth to protect me beyond the invention of Googleporter. By the time your file transfer is complete this part of Brooklyn will have been reclaimed by the rising sea.
Sean, it's only sporting if you keep the camera in a holster on your hip and shoot with one hand.
LV, I was so pleased with catching a couple real bolts that I didn't really think much about the overall composition. I did wrestle a little with the contrast in post-production.  There's probably a way to really darken the sky and crisp up the bolt but I was only able to sharpen it a little.  For that matter I should probably try to take the color out and then give the contrast a tweak.  S'ok, next storm.
Will,

You might consider picking up a strobe slave trigger.  Attach it to your remote trigger(if your camera has one, many do) make your exposure settings and leave your camera in a fixed, framed composition location on a tripod.  When the lightning flashes, it activates your camera to shoot automatically.
Woods, thanks.  Are you saying this thing can see the flash of lightning and take a picture of it before the lightning goes away?  That would be seriously amazing. I'll check the B&H catalog and see what they have.
Yes, it works.  They are made to trigger the attached device when used with standard electronic strobes, which are very fast.


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