efficiency

Five Field Tips to Make Night Photography Go a Little Smoother

We’ve said night photography is fun. We’ve never said it’s easy.

We all encounter challenges that we need to overcome in order to get the shot. This is true even when working with other night photographers, but it’s especially true when we’re shooting alone.

Every photographer has their solutions to these little (or sometimes big) problems, which help us be more productive in the field at night. Below, each of the five National Parks at Night instructors offers one tip to work just a little smoother, a little better, a little more efficiently in the dark.

Lay Your Flashlight in Your Light Painting Spot

by Gabriel Biderman

When I first started light painting I was incredibly frustrated with the inconsistencies of my painting from shot to shot. The problem was that I would try a lighting strategy, then walk back to the camera to see how I did, then walk back out into the scene and try again—always from a slightly different spot! Why? Because it was dark and I couldn’t see exactly where I’d been standing before. That meant that the angle and distance would change as I went back and forth between my camera and my approximate painting location.

The first solution I came up with was marking my spot in the dirt or putting a rock there, so I’d know where I’d been standing. However, there aren’t rocks or etchable dirt at every location, and again, it was dark, so the mark could be hard to find.

Eventually I realized that there was another good marker that I always have with me: a flashlight. Now when I’m done testing some light painting, I place my flashlight on the ground at my feet, and my spot is easy to find again!

When working on this image in Cape Hatteras National Seashore, I put my flashlight on the ground to mark the spot I was light painting from, so I could easily return after checking the image on the camera’s LCD. You can see the beam shining along the grass from where it was laying.

Of course, this works only if my spot is not in the frame, otherwise the camera will record the flashlight during the rest of the exposure. Also, if the exposure is still running, then I make sure to put the flashlight on the ground facing away from the scene, so as not to spill in more light than I want.

Now I can always find my exact place to repeat the lighting process after reviewing my image. This has been incredibly helpful when I am photographing alone and has helped me nail my light painting more quickly and more efficiently.

Set Up a Custom Menu

by Tim Cooper

As we all know, night photography can pose many challenges. For this reason it’s important to eliminate as many issues as we can so we can focus our efforts on the actual photography. One challenge to overcome is working with our camera in the dark. By being very familiar with our camera’s controls, we can easily make adjustments, focus and shoot without the constant need for turning on our flashlights or fumbling around while wasting otherwise productive time.

That’s easy enough (with practice) when we’re talking about buttons and dials—the controls that are on the camera body. But many features live deep in the camera’s menu system. Scouring the extensive menus for a particular function while in the field can be frustrating. It’s also avoidable.

I save a lot of time in the field by setting up a custom menu in my camera. Most modern cameras allow this, specifically so you can collect your most oft-used functions into one easily accessible place. In the following video, I’ll show you how to do just that!

Use a Low-Powered Light For Seeing

by Lance Keimig

If you’ve been on a workshop with me, you might have been gently chastised for using your 2 million-lumen flashlight to adjust your camera settings. Overly bright flashlights wipe out your hard-won night vision, making it difficult to visualize your surroundings without the light. And in a workshop environment, using a flashlight that’s brighter than necessary often causes unwanted light pollution in other people’s images.

Red lights cause similar but often more serious problems, because even at very low levels they bleed profusely into the shadow areas of everyone’s images. Red lights also diminish depth perception, making accidents much more likely on uneven ground, especially in red-rock environments.

To avoid all these issues, I use a flashlight in the field as little as possible (except for when light painting), and when I do, I use the dimmest in my arsenal. That way I can get a little extra light in extra-dark situations without ruining my night vision or other people’s photographs.

Using a bright flashlight (left) just to check camera settings is overkill—it will ruin your night vision, not to mention the exposures of others who may be working around you. A lower-powered light (right) is a more subtle option that is less likely to cause unintended consequences.

My favorite for this purpose is the Coast G9, which Coast has been gifting to our domestic workshop attendees for the past couple of years. This small and relatively dim flashlight can be easily dimmed even further by removing the head and placing a couple of layers of tissue or toilet paper in front of the bulb. (If you want to get fancy and warm up the color temperature, add a piece of CTO or warming gel at the same time.)

This 2-minute hack will provide you with a light that will be just bright enough to navigate a dark path, to find that spare battery in your camera bag, or anything else that requires just a touch of illumination.

Protect Yourself and Your Bag With a Blanket

by Matt Hill

One thing I’ve found I just couldn’t live without is something I didn’t even buy for myself. I didn’t know how much I needed it until after I received it as a gift! (Thanks, D&E!) I’m referring to the Matador Pocket Blanket.

Sometimes the ground is … well, dirty. And during a long exposure I might want to just stretch out and gaze lovingly at the stars. Or I might even want to—gasp!—put down my camera bag without getting it muddy or sandy. This super-thin blanket packs to 4-by-3 inches, so stowing it in my bag is easy, yet it unfolds to a surprising 63-by-44. I can use the hidden corner stakes to anchor it in place, and when it’s time to fold the blanket, a stitched line pattern reminds me of the perfect way to make it tiny once again.

I love this blanket so much that when I misplaced it, I bought another. And then I found the original. So now I have two. Which makes me twice as happy.

Use an LED to Find Your Tripod

by Chris Nicholson

A lot of night photography involves long exposures. And not just long exposures, but looooonnnnnnggggg exposures. Leaving the shutter open for an hour or more is not unusual. During those times, I often wander away from the camera, whether to explore, to return to a warm location, or even to shoot with a second setup somewhere else. The problem is that sometimes it’s hard to find that camera again in the dark.

Of course, I could probably locate the camera more often than not by just waving a high-powered flashlight around. But that would likely ruin my exposure (especially if I inadvertently shined the light directly into the lens), not to mention ruin the work of anyone I might be out shooting with.

The solution I use most often is to put a tiny light right on the tripod—something bright enough for me to see in the dark, but not bright enough to affect exposure. And to be safe, I point that light away from the scene.

Even a tiny LED can be seen from pretty far away in the dark, making it easy to find a tripod that’s supporting a long exposure.

What kind of light? I use the flashing LED on my geotracker. It’s a piece of gear I always have with me on a shoot. It usually hangs off my belt loop or my backpack strap. But it also hangs nicely on the hook below my ball head.

Contrary to what a non-night person might assume, that LED is incredibly easy to see in dark conditions. In 2017 I was shooting at the Racetrack Playa in Death Valley National Park. It was way too cold to stay out with the camera during a one-hour exposure, so we walked back to the Jeep—one mile away! Even from there, I could faintly discern that tiny LED flashing in perfect darkness across the flats. Found my camera right away.

Wrapping Up

There you have it—five tips for working just a little easier in the dark!

How about you? What are some hacks that you’ve found useful for making the night photography experience just a little simpler or a little more enjoyable? Feel free to share in the comments below or on our Facebook page.

Chris Nicholson is a partner and workshop leader with National Parks at Night, and author of Photographing National Parks (Sidelight Books, 2015). Learn more about national parks as photography destinations, subscribe to Chris' free e-newsletter, and more at www.PhotographingNationalParks.com.

UPCOMING WORKSHOPS FROM NATIONAL PARKS AT NIGHT

Save Time by Using High ISO Testing to Set Up Your Night Shots

When photographing in very dark environments, the camera’s light meter is usually unable to suggest a starting exposure. It can be a tedious exercise of trial and error to determine the best exposure to use.

Waiting 15 or 20 minutes for an exposure to finish, and then an additional 15 or 20 minutes for Long Exposure Noise Reduction, can be very frustrating if the end result is an image that is considerably under- or over-exposed. Waiting that long for an image only to find out that the shot was not properly focused, or that the camera was not level, isn’t any better.

To take some of the guesswork out of calculating long exposures, and to save time in doing so, I developed a simple method for testing exposures at high ISOs.


High ISO testing

The aim of High ISO test exposures is two-fold. The first is to quickly determine the correct exposure in moonlight or other very dark situations. High ISO testing is not very useful in situations where the final exposure will be less than about 2 minutes.

The second purpose is to confirm focus, composition and camera alignment, and to make sure there are no unintended distractions in the frame. Using this procedure will save you a lot of time and will eliminate a lot of frustration in the field.

Testing is performed by raising the ISO 6 stops above your camera’s native ISO. This is because there are six stops of exposure between 1 second and 1 minute, and using this formula allows for a direct translation from testing exposure in seconds to final exposure in minutes. This greatly simplifies exposure calculation, and as a result:

The number of seconds in a High ISO test exposure equals the number of minutes at the native ISO at the same aperture.

For native 100 ISO cameras, the testing ISO is 6400
For native 200 ISO cameras, the testing ISO is 12,800

In moonlight or similar relatively low-contrast situations, using the histogram is the best way to determine exposure. A good starting point in full-moon conditions is 5 seconds, ISO 6400, f/8, or 3 seconds, ISO 12800, f/8. (Choose one depending on your ISO—see above.) This results in a quick exposure for testing composition, focus, etc. When you’re ready for the real shot, that exposure becomes 5 minutes, ISO 100, f/8, or 3 minutes, ISO 200, f/8.

Just outside Big Bend National Park, I used a High ISO test (above) to get the image right with fast exposures, then reduced the ISO and lowered my shutter speed to get the final images (below).

Just outside Big Bend National Park, I used a High ISO test (above) to get the image right with fast exposures, then reduced the ISO and lowered my shutter speed to get the final images (below).

Keep in mind that there is no one correct exposure, but many possibilities that will all yield different results. Use the exposure that best meets your needs based on your intended appearance of the final shot. In a moonlight-only image, a full, right-biased histogram may be best for optimal image quality. If you will be adding light to the shot, a better ambient exposure might be one that is just enough to avoid shadow clipping. In that case, the highlights will be provided by the added light, which will also push the histogram to the right. Simply increase or decrease the exposure until the desired histogram is achieved.

Photographing by the light of the moon and light painting is a lot of fun, and can be a tremendously rewarding endeavor with almost limitless possibilities. Getting the technical aspects of exposure and lighting out of the way quickly and efficiently leaves you with more time and energy to use your creativity to make truly outstanding images.

With practice, these techniques will become second-nature. If you incorporate them into your working methods, you’ll be rewarded with increased productivity, and with a higher success rate with your night photography.

Lance Keimig has been photographing at night for 30 years, and is the author of Night Photography and Light Painting: Finding Your Way in the Dark (Focal Press, 2015). Learn more about his images and workshops at www.thenightskye.com.

Upcoming workshops from National Parks at Night