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Night photography

Night photography (also called nighttime photography) refers to the activity of capturing images outdoors at night, between dusk and dawn. Night photographers generally have a choice between using artificial lighting and using a long exposure, exposing the shot for seconds, minutes, or even hours in order to give photosensitive film or an image sensor enough time to capture a desirable image. With the progress of high-speed films, higher-sensitivity digital sensors, wide-aperture lenses, and the ever-greater power of urban lights, night photography is increasingly possible using available light.

A long-exposure image of star trails in the night sky above Mount Hood National Forest, Washington, facing north at 6,600 ft (2,000 m) above sea level
A London taxi turning outside the railway station at Sutton, London
The Singapore skyline at night
An aerial photograph of Los Angeles County at night
Mariehamn, a capital of Åland, at night

History edit

The very long exposure times of early photographic processes didn't mean people didn't try to take photographs at night from quite early on. The development of mechanical clock drives meant cameras attached to telescopes could eventually capture successful images of celestial objects.

The first-known attempt at astronomical photography was by Louis Jacques Mandé Daguerre, inventor of the daguerreotype process which bears his name, who attempted in 1839 to photograph the Moon. Tracking errors in guiding the telescope during the long exposure meant the photograph came out as an indistinct fuzzy spot.

John William Draper, New York University Professor of Chemistry, physician and scientific experimenter managed to make the first successful photograph of the moon a year later on March 23, 1840, taking a 20-minute-long daguerreotype image using a 5-inch (13 cm) reflecting telescope.

The increasing use of street lighting throughout the second half of the 19th century meant it was possible to capture nighttime scenes despite the long exposure times of the equipment of the period.

Developments in illumination, especially through the use of electricity, coincided with the shortening of exposure times. By the beginning of the 20th century newspapers and journals often showed night time views usually of illuminated urban streets or places of amusement such as Coney Island.

In the early 1900s, a few notable photographers, Alfred Stieglitz and William Fraser, began working at night. The first known female night photographer is Jessie Tarbox Beals.[citation needed] The first photographers known to have produced large bodies of work at night were Brassai and Bill Brandt. In 1932, Brassai published Paris de Nuit, a book of black-and-white photographs of the streets of Paris at night. During World War II, British photographer Brandt took advantage of the black-out conditions to photograph the streets of London by moonlight.

Photography at night found several new practitioners in the 1970s, beginning with the black and white photographs that Richard Misrach made of desert flora (1975–77). Joel Meyerowitz made luminous large format color studies of Cape Cod at nightfall which were published in his influential book, Cape Light (1979). Jan Staller’s twilight color photographs (1977–84) of abandoned and derelict parts of New York City captured uncanny visions of the urban landscape lit by the glare of sodium vapor street lights.

By the 1990s, British-born photographer Michael Kenna had established himself as the most commercially successful night photographer. His black-and-white landscapes were most often set between dusk and dawn in locations that included San Francisco, Japan, France, and England. Some of his most memorable projects depict the Ford Motor Company's Rouge River plant, the Ratcliffe-on-Soar Power Station in the East Midlands in England, and many of the Nazi concentration camps scattered across Germany, France, Belgium, Poland and Austria.

During the beginning of the 21st century, the popularity of digital cameras made it much easier for beginning photographers to understand the complexities of photographing at night. Today, there are hundreds of websites dedicated to night photography.

Subjects edit

Common subjects photographed at night or in low light include the following:

Technique and equipment edit

 
A long exposure time causes the lights on moving cars to streak across this image.

The following techniques and equipment are generally used in night photography.

  • A tripod is usually necessary due to the long exposure times. Alternatively, the camera may be placed on a steady, flat object e.g. a table or chair, low wall, window sill, etc.
  • A shutter release cable or self timer is almost always used to prevent camera shake when the shutter is released.
  • Manual focus, since autofocus systems usually operate poorly in low light conditions. Newer digital cameras incorporate a Live View mode which often allows very accurate manual focusing.
  • A stopwatch or remote timer, to time very long exposures where the camera's bulb setting is used.
  • A camera lens with a wide aperture, preferably one with aspherical elements that can minimize coma
  • A smartphone with a night photography mode, such as Night Mode on Huawei phones, Night Sight on Google Pixel phones, Night Mode on Samsung Galaxy phones, Night Mode on iPhone 11 Pro and Nightscape on Oneplus phones

Long exposures and multiple flashes edit

The long-exposure multiple-flash technique is a method of night or low-light photography which use a mobile flash unit to expose various parts of a building or interior using a long exposure.

This technique is often combined with using coloured gels in front of the flash unit to provide different colours in order to illuminate the subject in different ways. It is also common to flash the unit several times during the exposure while swapping the colours of the gels around to mix colours on the final photo. This requires some skill and a lot of imagination since it is not possible to see how the effects will turn out until the exposure is complete. By using this technique, the photographer can illuminate specific parts of the subject in different colours creating shadows in ways which would not normally be possible.

Painting with light edit

When the correct equipment is used such as a tripod and shutter release cable, the photographer can use long exposures to photograph images of light. For example, when photographing a subject try switching the exposure to manual and selecting the bulb setting on the camera. Once this is achieved trip the shutter and photograph your subject moving a flashlight or any small light in various patterns. Experiment with this outcome to produce artistic results. Multiple attempts are usually needed to produce the desired result.

High ISO edit

 
A night shot of downtown San Francisco at ISO 3200 on a full-frame rangefinder camera

Advanced imaging sensors along with sophisticated software processing make low-light photography with High ISO possible without a tripod or long exposure. Digital SLRs have high end APS-C and full-frame digital SLR sensors which have a very large dynamic range and high sensitivity, making them capable of night photography. These large sensor cameras are able to collect more light than smaller sensors due to the size of the imaging area. Combined with large aperture lenses and other equipment and techniques, this allows for photography with high quality in very dark locations.

BSI-CMOS is another type of CMOS sensor that is gradually entering the compact camera segment which is superior to the traditional CCD sensors. Cameras with small sensors such as: Sony Cyber-shot DSC-RX100, Nikon 1 J2 and Canon PowerShot G1X give good images up to ISO 400.[1]

Moonlight photography edit

Moonlight photography (capturing scenes on Earth illuminated by moonlight) greatly differs from lunar photography (capturing scenes on the Moon illuminated by direct sunlight). The Moon has an effective albedo of approximately 0.12, comparable to worn asphalt concrete. Since the Moon is essentially a dark body in direct sunlight, photographing its surface needs an exposure comparable to what a photographer would use for ordinary, mid-brightness surfaces (buildings, trees, faces, etc.) with an overcast sky.

The sunlight reflected from the full Moon onto Earth is about 1/250,000 of the brightness of direct sunlight in daytime. Since log2(250,000) = 17.93..., full-moon photography requires 18 stops more exposure than sunlight photography, for which the sunny 16 rule is a commonly used guideline.[2]

Reciprocity failure edit

Imagine a directly sunlit exposure of 1/100 second at ISO 100 and f/16 (the baseline of sunny 16). Adding 18 stops to convert from the Sun to the Moon could result in a shutter speed of 8 seconds at ISO 400 and f/2 (+10 stops of time, +2 stops of ISO, +6 stops of aperture). However, on most chemical film, such an exposure would turn out too dark. This is because film does not expose in linear proportion to the light it absorbs, an effect called reciprocity failure. At light levels as dim as moonlight, it needs more light than a linear extrapolation of daylight values would suggest.

For example, testing shows that Kodak Portra needs 1 extra stop for a nominal 8-second exposure, so in this case it would need 16 seconds.[3]

In practice, moonlight photography often uses exposures of several minutes. Digital cameras generally have less reciprocity failure, but do show image noise in low light.

Examples edit

Published night photographers edit

This section includes significant night photographers who have published books dedicated to night photography, and some of their selected works.

  • Robert Adams
  • Brassai
    • Paris de Nuit, Arts et metiers graphiques, 1932.
  • Harold Burdekin and John Morrison
    • London Night, Collins, 1934.
  • Jeff Brouws
    • Inside the Live Reptile Tent, Chronicle Books, 2001. ISBN 0-8118-2824-7
  • Alan Delaney
  • Maciej Dakowicz
  • Neil Folberg
  • Karekin Goekjian
    • Light After Dark, Lucinne, Inc. ASIN B0006QOVCG
  • Todd Hido
  • Peter Hujar
  • Rolfe Horn
  • Lance Keimig
  • Brian Kelly
  • Michael Kenna
  • William Lesch
  • O. Winston Link
  • Tom Paiva
  • Troy Paiva
    • Night Vision: The Art of Urban Exploration, Chronicle Books, 2008. ISBN 0-8118-6338-7
    • Lost America: The Abandoned Roadside West, MBI Publishing, 2003. ISBN 0-7603-1490-X
  • Andrew Sanderson
  • Bill Schwab
  • Jan Staller
  • Zabrina Tipton
    • At Night in San Francisco, San Francisco Guild of the Arts Press, 2006. ISBN 1-4243-1882-3
  • Giovanna Tucker
  • Nora Vrublevska and Dan Squires
  • Volkmar Wentzel

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . November 8, 2012. Archived from the original on June 29, 2013. Retrieved June 6, 2013.
  2. ^ Keimig, Lance (2 October 2012). Night Photography: Finding your way in the dark. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781136097256.
  3. ^ "Portra 160 and 400 Reciprocity Failure". largeformatphotography.info.
  4. ^ Woodward, Richard B. "Robert Adams, 'Summer Nights, Walking'". WSJ.
  5. ^ O'Hagan, Sean (2012-09-29). "Cardiff After Dark by Maciej Dakowicz". The Observer. ISSN 0029-7712. Retrieved 2024-01-23.
  6. ^ "Frontier New York – Jan Staller". www.janstaller.net.

External links edit

  • Comprehensive tutorials and articles about how to do night photography by The Nocturnes


night, photography, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, january. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Night photography news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2016 Learn how and when to remove this message Night photography also called nighttime photography refers to the activity of capturing images outdoors at night between dusk and dawn Night photographers generally have a choice between using artificial lighting and using a long exposure exposing the shot for seconds minutes or even hours in order to give photosensitive film or an image sensor enough time to capture a desirable image With the progress of high speed films higher sensitivity digital sensors wide aperture lenses and the ever greater power of urban lights night photography is increasingly possible using available light A long exposure image of star trails in the night sky above Mount Hood National Forest Washington facing north at 6 600 ft 2 000 m above sea level A London taxi turning outside the railway station at Sutton London The Singapore skyline at night An aerial photograph of Los Angeles County at night Mariehamn a capital of Aland at night Contents 1 History 2 Subjects 3 Technique and equipment 3 1 Long exposures and multiple flashes 3 2 Painting with light 3 3 High ISO 4 Moonlight photography 4 1 Reciprocity failure 5 Examples 6 Published night photographers 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory editThe very long exposure times of early photographic processes didn t mean people didn t try to take photographs at night from quite early on The development of mechanical clock drives meant cameras attached to telescopes could eventually capture successful images of celestial objects The first known attempt at astronomical photography was by Louis Jacques Mande Daguerre inventor of the daguerreotype process which bears his name who attempted in 1839 to photograph the Moon Tracking errors in guiding the telescope during the long exposure meant the photograph came out as an indistinct fuzzy spot John William Draper New York University Professor of Chemistry physician and scientific experimenter managed to make the first successful photograph of the moon a year later on March 23 1840 taking a 20 minute long daguerreotype image using a 5 inch 13 cm reflecting telescope The increasing use of street lighting throughout the second half of the 19th century meant it was possible to capture nighttime scenes despite the long exposure times of the equipment of the period Developments in illumination especially through the use of electricity coincided with the shortening of exposure times By the beginning of the 20th century newspapers and journals often showed night time views usually of illuminated urban streets or places of amusement such as Coney Island In the early 1900s a few notable photographers Alfred Stieglitz and William Fraser began working at night The first known female night photographer is Jessie Tarbox Beals citation needed The first photographers known to have produced large bodies of work at night were Brassai and Bill Brandt In 1932 Brassai published Paris de Nuit a book of black and white photographs of the streets of Paris at night During World War II British photographer Brandt took advantage of the black out conditions to photograph the streets of London by moonlight Photography at night found several new practitioners in the 1970s beginning with the black and white photographs that Richard Misrach made of desert flora 1975 77 Joel Meyerowitz made luminous large format color studies of Cape Cod at nightfall which were published in his influential book Cape Light 1979 Jan Staller s twilight color photographs 1977 84 of abandoned and derelict parts of New York City captured uncanny visions of the urban landscape lit by the glare of sodium vapor street lights By the 1990s British born photographer Michael Kenna had established himself as the most commercially successful night photographer His black and white landscapes were most often set between dusk and dawn in locations that included San Francisco Japan France and England Some of his most memorable projects depict the Ford Motor Company s Rouge River plant the Ratcliffe on Soar Power Station in the East Midlands in England and many of the Nazi concentration camps scattered across Germany France Belgium Poland and Austria During the beginning of the 21st century the popularity of digital cameras made it much easier for beginning photographers to understand the complexities of photographing at night Today there are hundreds of websites dedicated to night photography Subjects editCommon subjects photographed at night or in low light include the following Celestial bodies the Moon stars planets etc see astrophotography and star trail City skylines Factories and industrial areas particularly those that are brightly lit and are emitting smoke steam or another aerosol Fireworks Nightlife or rock concerts Lit caves Roads with or without cars Abandoned buildings or other artificial structures that are only moonlit Bodies of water that are reflecting moonlight or city lights lakes rivers canals etc Lightning during thunderstorms Aurora northern or southern lights Lava Amusement rides Lit aircraft BioluminescenceTechnique and equipment edit nbsp A long exposure time causes the lights on moving cars to streak across this image The following techniques and equipment are generally used in night photography A tripod is usually necessary due to the long exposure times Alternatively the camera may be placed on a steady flat object e g a table or chair low wall window sill etc A shutter release cable or self timer is almost always used to prevent camera shake when the shutter is released Manual focus since autofocus systems usually operate poorly in low light conditions Newer digital cameras incorporate a Live View mode which often allows very accurate manual focusing A stopwatch or remote timer to time very long exposures where the camera s bulb setting is used A camera lens with a wide aperture preferably one with aspherical elements that can minimize coma A smartphone with a night photography mode such as Night Mode on Huawei phones Night Sight on Google Pixel phones Night Mode on Samsung Galaxy phones Night Mode on iPhone 11 Pro and Nightscape on Oneplus phones Long exposures and multiple flashes edit The long exposure multiple flash technique is a method of night or low light photography which use a mobile flash unit to expose various parts of a building or interior using a long exposure This technique is often combined with using coloured gels in front of the flash unit to provide different colours in order to illuminate the subject in different ways It is also common to flash the unit several times during the exposure while swapping the colours of the gels around to mix colours on the final photo This requires some skill and a lot of imagination since it is not possible to see how the effects will turn out until the exposure is complete By using this technique the photographer can illuminate specific parts of the subject in different colours creating shadows in ways which would not normally be possible Painting with light edit See also Light painting When the correct equipment is used such as a tripod and shutter release cable the photographer can use long exposures to photograph images of light For example when photographing a subject try switching the exposure to manual and selecting the bulb setting on the camera Once this is achieved trip the shutter and photograph your subject moving a flashlight or any small light in various patterns Experiment with this outcome to produce artistic results Multiple attempts are usually needed to produce the desired result High ISO edit nbsp A night shot of downtown San Francisco at ISO 3200 on a full frame rangefinder camera Advanced imaging sensors along with sophisticated software processing make low light photography with High ISO possible without a tripod or long exposure Digital SLRs have high end APS C and full frame digital SLR sensors which have a very large dynamic range and high sensitivity making them capable of night photography These large sensor cameras are able to collect more light than smaller sensors due to the size of the imaging area Combined with large aperture lenses and other equipment and techniques this allows for photography with high quality in very dark locations BSI CMOS is another type of CMOS sensor that is gradually entering the compact camera segment which is superior to the traditional CCD sensors Cameras with small sensors such as Sony Cyber shot DSC RX100 Nikon 1 J2 and Canon PowerShot G1X give good images up to ISO 400 1 Moonlight photography editMoonlight photography capturing scenes on Earth illuminated by moonlight greatly differs from lunar photography capturing scenes on the Moon illuminated by direct sunlight The Moon has an effective albedo of approximately 0 12 comparable to worn asphalt concrete Since the Moon is essentially a dark body in direct sunlight photographing its surface needs an exposure comparable to what a photographer would use for ordinary mid brightness surfaces buildings trees faces etc with an overcast sky The sunlight reflected from the full Moon onto Earth is about 1 250 000 of the brightness of direct sunlight in daytime Since log2 250 000 17 93 full moon photography requires 18 stops more exposure than sunlight photography for which the sunny 16 rule is a commonly used guideline 2 Reciprocity failure edit Imagine a directly sunlit exposure of 1 100 second at ISO 100 and f 16 the baseline of sunny 16 Adding 18 stops to convert from the Sun to the Moon could result in a shutter speed of 8 seconds at ISO 400 and f 2 10 stops of time 2 stops of ISO 6 stops of aperture However on most chemical film such an exposure would turn out too dark This is because film does not expose in linear proportion to the light it absorbs an effect called reciprocity failure At light levels as dim as moonlight it needs more light than a linear extrapolation of daylight values would suggest For example testing shows that Kodak Portra needs 1 extra stop for a nominal 8 second exposure so in this case it would need 16 seconds 3 In practice moonlight photography often uses exposures of several minutes Digital cameras generally have less reciprocity failure but do show image noise in low light Examples edit nbsp Clun lake and castle by moonlight 1920s nbsp Sao Paulo Brazil nbsp Chay kenar Boulevard in Tabriz Iran nbsp An exposure blended night image of the Sydney Opera House nbsp Amusement rides nbsp Four image panorama of Washington Park 30 second exposures each nbsp An exposure blended image consisting of 30 2 5 and 10 second exposures nbsp Early night photograph of the Luna Park Coney Island from the Detroit Publishing Co collection 1905 Published night photographers editThis section includes significant night photographers who have published books dedicated to night photography and some of their selected works Robert Adams Summer nights walking along the Colorado front range 1976 1982 Millerton NY Aperture New Haven CT Yale University Art Gallery 1982 4 Brassai Paris de Nuit Arts et metiers graphiques 1932 Harold Burdekin and John Morrison London Night Collins 1934 Jeff Brouws Inside the Live Reptile Tent Chronicle Books 2001 ISBN 0 8118 2824 7 Alan Delaney London After Dark Phaidon Press 1993 ISBN 0 7148 2870 X Maciej Dakowicz Cardiff after Dark London Thames amp Hudson 2012 ISBN 978 0 500 54419 8 5 Neil Folberg Celestial Nights Aperture Foundation 2001 ISBN 0 89381 945 X Karekin Goekjian Light After Dark Lucinne Inc ASIN B0006QOVCG Todd Hido Outskirts Nazraeli Press 2002 ISBN 1 59005 028 2 House Hunting Nazraeli 2001 ISBN 978 3923922963 Peter Hujar Night Matthew Marks Gallery Fraenkel Gallery 2005 ISBN 1 880146 45 2 Rolfe Horn 28 Photographs Nazraeli Press ISBN 1 59005 122 X Lance Keimig Night Photography Finding Your Way In The Dark Focal Press 2010 ISBN 978 0 240 81258 8 Brian Kelly Grand Rapids Night After Night Glass Eye 2001 ISBN 0 9701293 0 0 Michael Kenna The Rouge RAM Publications 1995 ISBN 0 9630785 1 8 Night Work Nazraeli Press 2000 ISBN 3 923922 83 3 William Lesch Expansions RAM Publications 1992 ISBN 4 8457 0667 9 O Winston Link The Last Steam Railroad in America Harry Abrams 1995 ISBN 0 8109 3575 9 Tom Paiva Industrial Night The Image Room 2002 ISBN 0 9716928 0 7 Troy Paiva Night Vision The Art of Urban Exploration Chronicle Books 2008 ISBN 0 8118 6338 7 Lost America The Abandoned Roadside West MBI Publishing 2003 ISBN 0 7603 1490 X Andrew Sanderson Night Photography Amphoto Books ISBN 0 8174 5007 6 Bill Schwab Bill Schwab Photographs North Light Press 1999 ISBN 0 9765193 0 5 Gathering Calm North Light Press 2005 ISBN 0 9765193 2 1 Jan Staller Frontier New York Hudson Hills Press 1988 ISBN 1 55595 009 4 6 Zabrina Tipton At Night in San Francisco San Francisco Guild of the Arts Press 2006 ISBN 1 4243 1882 3 Giovanna Tucker How to Night Photography 2011 ISBN 978 1 4657 4423 4 Nora Vrublevska and Dan Squires Cambridge at Night 2013 ISBN 978 1 935489 27 6 Volkmar Wentzel Washington by Night Fulcrum Publishing 1998 ISBN 978 1 55591 410 3See also editAvailable light Light paintingReferences edit Tested and Compared 21 Top Cameras For Digital Low Light Photography November 8 2012 Archived from the original on June 29 2013 Retrieved June 6 2013 Keimig Lance 2 October 2012 Night Photography Finding your way in the dark Taylor amp Francis ISBN 9781136097256 Portra 160 and 400 Reciprocity Failure largeformatphotography info Woodward Richard B Robert Adams Summer Nights Walking WSJ O Hagan Sean 2012 09 29 Cardiff After Dark by Maciej Dakowicz The Observer ISSN 0029 7712 Retrieved 2024 01 23 Frontier New York Jan Staller www janstaller net External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Night photography Comprehensive tutorials and articles about how to do night photography by The Nocturnes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Night photography amp oldid 1217826466, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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