Mastering Firework Photography

 

1. Plan Where To Shoot The Firework Display 

This takes some time and effort on your part and isn’t always the easiest part to get right. If you know the area the firework display is taking place in, you have a slight advantage. If it’s a new location and you don’t have the opportunity to do a reccy first, you’ll have to think quickly when you arrive. The biggest problem with new or unknown locations is that you turn up in the dark and it’s difficult to spot where you can get to.

Ideally, you want to shoot a fireworks display some distance away from the crowds. Most events require that spectators stay a set distance back (wisely). But even this distance might mean that you are shooting straight up in the air. Not an easy thing to do if your camera is mounted on a tripod (see point 2.)

If you can move back behind the crowd and get some clear air between you and the back of the crowd. It gives you opportunity to shoot across their heads and get some spectacular firework photographs without having to lie on the floor to see through your viewfinder. It also means that you can get the crowd into your shots as silhouettes as the fireworks go off, adding some lower foreground interest.

Sometimes it’s even worth moving much further away from a display, taking photographs from high up. Top of buildings if in a city, top of hills if rural. Where you can get the whole display and the surrounding areas as it gets lit up from the fireworks.

2. Firework Composition

Time for a little guesswork. If you know where the fireworks are to be set off from and have a rough idea of which way the wind is blowing. You should be able to get a reasonable idea of where abouts in the sky the main action is going to take place. You can also position yourself so that the smoke that the fireworks give off when lit blows away from you and not towards you. If you position yourself so that the wind is coming directly at you, you may end up with some very hazy photographs.

Of course, not all fireworks go off at the same height. So you need to be reasonably flexible in where you are pointing the camera to a degree. Although the further away from the display you are, the less of an issue this becomes.

Make sure if you are shooting close to the display that there are no powerlines cutting across your scene. This may sound obvious, but when those fireworks light up the sky. Anything cutting across the scene will be brightly backlit and will spoil your shot.

Also try and ensure you keep the camera relatively level in relation to the horizon, especially if it is included and lit in the background. Make sure you review and adjust as necessary when you start shooting. You don’t want to take a series of photographs only to find in post-processing that you’ve got to compensate for a wonky horizon line.

3. Firework Photography Requires a Tripod

This is essential. Taking photographs of fireworks means that you are shooting bright objects in a dark sky. And you don’t want to introduce camera shake into the equation. The longer shutter speeds that you will need to use means that any camera movement will result in a blurred shot.

If you can’t use a tripod, you are going to have to ensure the camera is as rock steady as you can get it. Look for alternatives such as wells, fences or tree branches that can be used as a makeshift perch.

4. Use a Remote Shutter Release

As well as mounting your camera on a tripod, using a remote shutter release will help reduce camera shake even further. The less you need to touch the camera during the moment it takes the photograph, the better.

Remote releases tend to come in two varieties, wired and wireless. It doesn’t matter which you use, and if you haven’t got one I suggest you look on somewhere like eBay, as there are plenty of third-party manufactured shutter releases that do the same job as the official ones but at less cost.

As well as reducing camera shake, the remote shutter release has another great advantage. You can actually watch the fireworks display without looking through the viewfinder. And can then make better decisions on when to press the shutter button. If you are looking through the viewfinder all the time. You sometimes are unaware of when the fireworks are coming into view. Or at what point to set a longer shutter release going.

5. Camera Setup For Firework Photography

Camera Setup for shooting a fireworks display is of course important, and you need to ensure you know how you want to set the camera up before positioning it on your tripod (or wall, fence, tree.) It might even be worth getting the camera basics setup before you leave the house, assuming you are going to do nothing other than taking firework photographs with it.

To get the control required for photographing fireworks, you need to put your DSLR (or point and shoot) into manual mode and take control of both shutter speed and aperture.

The bright nature of fireworks and the contrast with the dark sky means that you need to use a fairly small aperture of around f/8, going down to f/22 if required, to help reduce overexposure as you select a longer shutter speed. You need a longer shutter speed to get that nice rainfall effect that you see in photographs of fireworks. Again, the longer the shutter speed, the more light that hits the sensor and therefore greater the risk of overexposure.

Make sure you check the histogram for blown highlights. If you are finding you have overexposed the photo, reduce the aperture and increase the shutter speed. But remember that you will lose that rainfall effect.

You can try using just shutter-priority or aperture-priority modes on your camera. But be aware that with a dark sky. The camera may struggle to work out its exposure correctly.

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