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Fireworks



The Camera settings are relatively simple.
Exposure time:
What we want are exposure times of 10-30 seconds. Why? There are enough fireworks during this time and the sky is never empty. In the run-up, once you've found your location, then simply take the settings test shots to see when the environment is well exposed (this should be seen later on the photo and not overexposed). Depending on the city or country you get different values ​​here.
ISO number
As little as possible to avoid unnecessary noise. Say: If your camera can, ISO 100
cover

In fireworks we have a field of photography where all values ​​interact well. We want a great depth of field and we want to be able to expose for a long time. Therefore a large aperture value (speak aperture 8 upwards). As a reminder: The smaller the aperture (high fade value), the less light comes into the camera - the exposure times increase and the depth of field increases.
focal length

Here, something usually helps in the direction of 50mm or less. We need a lot of sky and few close-ups. Therefore, wrap a lens that is between 24 and 70 mm.
sharpness

Also the point of sharpness is usually fixed in advance. Due to the large depth of field, this is not a problem. If we do not change the cropping while photographing, we adjust the sharpness beforehand and see that the camera is set to manual focus and not AF itself trying to determine the sharpness (which usually does not work in the dark anyway).



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