Equipment Used: Nikon D750,
Tokina 28-70mm f2.8 AT-X Lense, VanGuard Abel Plus 363CT Tripod, Viltrox Remote
Control, Capture NX-D, Lightroom & Photoshop CC
Lake Panoramas 4th of
July fireworks were enjoyed by boaters and other spectators a few days earlier
then the 4th since it fell on a Tuesday this year. That Saturday night, I took a break from a
work at the restaurant and drove down to the beach to capture the firework
bursts over the boats.
With a week left before I had to
return the Tokina lense, I tested it out shooting fireworks by placing it on
the D750 and mounting the rig on the VanGuard tripod. I discovered that the
location of the focus ring that I had used for taking milky way images didn’t
provide sharp images of the fireworks so I had to do some adjusting. I shot in
RAW using manual mode with the shutter speed set on bulb and aperture
f7.1. ISO ranged from as low as 100 to a
high of 3200. The Viltrox remote was used to trigger the camera and I held it
down between 8 to 20 seconds to capture these fireworks.
To process the images, the
majority of the time I used Lightroom and adjusted the white balance to
daylight as my first step. Next came adjustments to clarity, vibrance,
saturation, noise reduction and dehaze sliders. In the HSL tab, I used the
color specific saturation sliders to bump up the saturation of the certain
colors of the firework bursts. Graduated filter tool was used on the sky and
firework burst part of the image as well. Finally I used the adjustment brush
to lighten the bottom area of the image so the water and boats were visible.
The last part of processing used
Photoshop with the patch and clone tools to get rid of unwanted objects on
these images. This included a buoy in the center of the boats and a cell phone
tower along the tree line. A brightness/contrast
layer mask was used to fine tune the look of the sky and fireworks to put the
final touches on the images.
The firework show was a great
display over the surrounding scence of water and boats with hundreds of people
watching the show.
#1.
#2.
#3.
#4.
#5.
#6.
#7.
#8.
#9.
#10.
#11.
#12.
#13.
#14.
#15.
#16.
#17.
#17B.
#18.
#18B.
1 comment:
Nice article and I felt very happy after read this content.
Easy Cover For DSLR
Post a Comment