How to shoot photos around bright lights indoors and during nighttime

By | February 8, 2010, 5:10am PST

Summary: Having a lot of light is typically good for photography, but sometimes you have to be wary of it. Too much light can wash out subjects in a photo. Here are a few tips to keep in mind when you have a lot of light in the room but want to control it for your photo.

Having a lot of light is typically good for photography, but sometimes you have to be wary of it. Too much light can wash out subjects in a photo. Here are a few tips to keep in mind when you have a lot of light in the room but want to control it for your photo.

1. Avoid flash: While it might enhance some features hidden in the dark, either indoors or outside at night, it will also diminish the radiance and brightness of the already-present light. Turn the flash off and see how well you do without the unnatural light function.

2. ISO: This might take a bit of experimentation. If the setting is significantly bright, you might be able to get away with an ISO 400 (maybe 200). But if its a lot of bright lights indoors (like holiday lights) or outdoors at night (like the Eiffel Tour above), the average ISO required should be 800. You can try 1600 (or higher if your camera allows it), but then you risk a lot of noise.

3. Noise reduction: With a high ISO and lack of natural light, the fast speed might bring a lot of noise with it. You could either go with the higher ISO and try to reduce noise in a photo-editing program on your computer, or you could try getting access to a digital camera that comes with a preset noise reduction function. DSLRs are far better than point-and-shoots in this regard.

4. Turn off Auto White Balance: I’m very anti-flash, so I tend to turn it off indoors. Even with enough light in the room, there’s still usually a side-effect: a warm, yellow hue over the frame. This will take some adjusting with your white balance settings, but usually AWB induces all whites to turn yellow with natural light indoors.

5. Shoot two exposures: This could mean a number of things. You could experiment with ISO settings, with or without flash, and shoot different objects in focus to get the most sharp frame possible. Then you could piece the two images together in a photo-editing program.

6. Use a tripod: If you’re troubled by camera shake after all of these steps, you’ll need to use a tripod or some other kind of sturdy service nearby. If its especially dark or the object is difficult to capture, considering using the camera’s timer or a remote to set off the exposure.

Do you have any extra tips to share when photographing indoors around a lot of bright lights?

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Rachel King is a staff writer for ZDNet based in San Francisco.

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Rachel King

Rachel King has no business relationships, affiliations, investments, or other potential conflicts of interest relating to the content posted in this blog.

Biography

Rachel King

Rachel King is a staff writer for CBS Interactive in San Francisco. Before serving as a contributing editor at ZDNet in New York City for two years, she previously worked for The Business Insider, FastCompany.com, CNN's San Francisco bureau and the U.S. Department of State. Rachel has also written for MainStreet.com, Irish America Magazine and the New York Daily News, among others. Rachel has a B.A. in Mass Communications and History from the University of California, Berkeley and a M.S. in Journalism from Columbia University, where she served as art director for the student magazine, Plated.

Rachel started playing with her mother's old Brownie camera when she was just a toddler, working her way up from a Hello Kitty point-and-shoot to training on both film and digital SLRs.

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RE:How to shoot photos around bright lights indoors and during nighttime
three-shao 19th Sep
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Tripod
rreinhold058@... 8th Feb 2010
A comment on 'use a tripod'. Many good night shots can be had by bracing the camera on a solid surface and using the self timer. I've taken several good night shots out of windows by simply bracing the camera against the window frame. I particularly like a couple I took of Cathedral Square in Christchurch, NZ.
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Try High Dynamic Range
dony_z 8th Feb 2010
I have been using HDR techniques with good success. For example, I shot downtown Las Vegas from the 38th floor of a building two blocks off the strip. I increased the dynamic range and that showed all the bright lights as well as lighting up all the shadows. Fabulous photo and more like the human eye sees than a regular photo. Use a tripod; three shot bracket of the scene and then CS4 does the HDR. Be gentle with the settings and you get a fabulous shot. Go crazy with the settings and you get surrealistic but not accurate rendition.
This article is remarkable in that it contradicts each and every rule stock photo agencies teach their contributors. i.e.
http://www.istockphoto.com/tutorial_2.3_noise.php
Those read, in a nutshell, that one should try to use the lowest ISO possible, and even then one may sometimes end up with a noise level not correctable with any software. By following the agency's rules, however, you will be lugging around a tripod more than you would like to.
Newer DSLR's do much better at higher ISO settings than their predecessors, even up to 1600. Even so, sometimes the extra noise in a high ISO photograph is more desirable creatively than a sharp image.
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Manual
cwallen19803@... 8th Feb 2010
I just use the manual settings and adjust the appeture and shutter speed until it looks good. Chances are the shutter speed will require a tripod.
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