Photography question
Posted: Mon Jun 12, 2006 5:14 am
Last night I was out experimenting with my camera and was trying to take pics of cars travelling at speed from a bridge over a dual carriageway - the effect I got was "long trailing" headlights which looked pretty cool but is it possible to have the opposite effect and just have a normal picture despite shooting such a high speed subject?
Im **guessing** its down to how long the shutter is open for and I need to adjust that to a higher setting - is that correct or is it the other way around? The pics I did take were in just automatic mode - the camera is a Canon 350D.
Also another thing I noticed is that in daylight with no flash the camera can take pics basically as quickly as I can press the button without filling the buffer but at night there is quite a long pause between shots. If this is a shot with flash Im guessing its as the flash recharges - would getting an external flash improve this and if so what should I be looking for? Even when the flash is disabled it still slows down a lot and feels almost clunky - is this normal??
TIA
Phil
P.S. And NO Im not going to use the flash for shooting cars or off bridges etc and startling motorists!!
Im **guessing** its down to how long the shutter is open for and I need to adjust that to a higher setting - is that correct or is it the other way around? The pics I did take were in just automatic mode - the camera is a Canon 350D.
Also another thing I noticed is that in daylight with no flash the camera can take pics basically as quickly as I can press the button without filling the buffer but at night there is quite a long pause between shots. If this is a shot with flash Im guessing its as the flash recharges - would getting an external flash improve this and if so what should I be looking for? Even when the flash is disabled it still slows down a lot and feels almost clunky - is this normal??
TIA
Phil
P.S. And NO Im not going to use the flash for shooting cars or off bridges etc and startling motorists!!