Sunset Photography - Perfect Exposures Every Time

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  • čas přidán 14. 07. 2021
  • Sunset Photography is hard to get right. You see a fantastic orange sunset, you take the picture and the sky is too bright or the ground is too dark. This is a very common scenario so how do the pros get perfect exposures in their sunset photos? Well, here I’m going to answer that question and give you 4 great tips to ensure you exposure correctly for perfect sunset photography, every time.
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Komentáře • 74

  • @carolboydcollins878
    @carolboydcollins878 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Very helpful breakdown of the options with enough details to do it. No rambling - straight to the points. Perfect!

  • @stkildatram1983
    @stkildatram1983 Před rokem +3

    Good, clear instruction with no waffle. Many thanks for explaining the techniques so understandably.

  • @mohdnoorlong
    @mohdnoorlong Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you so much.

  • @AwesomeAndrew
    @AwesomeAndrew Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you, really informative and helpful, very much appreciated.

  • @karlhungus5554
    @karlhungus5554 Před 2 lety +3

    Thank you for the video and helpful tips. I'm not even good enough to call myself a rookie photographer, but I've always loved taking photos. For the last several years, due to health issues, I've not been able to get out and capture any images. But, I'm now at least thinking about photography again and wondering what I can learn about the craft, so I'll be better informed if/when I'm able to get out in nature again.
    Until this video, I always thought that incredible images like yours were simply the result of expensive equipment, decades of experience, and being at the right place at the perfect time. This video really surprised me by how much additional work -- in addition to the gear, experience, location, and timing -- can go into obtaining the perfect photo.
    On one hand, it's a good to know that great photographers aren't always born with such talents and that certain aspects of photography can be learned, practiced, and improved. On the other hand, it's daunting to think of how much more I might need to learn, in order to be a decent photographer. There's way more to it that I imagined.

  • @stuartgregory6607
    @stuartgregory6607 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for a beautifully simple explanation of a challenging subject - loved it.

  • @adrianoguedes7970
    @adrianoguedes7970 Před 2 lety +2

    Amazing class; great and very well explained technique. Thank you, Sir!

  • @paulmilovich2982
    @paulmilovich2982 Před 3 lety +2

    Great informative video Mark, going to have to give a couple of your tips a try. Thanks again.

  • @dorihungerbuhler7885
    @dorihungerbuhler7885 Před rokem +1

    Thank you very much for this explanation. Perfect! Just what I needed.

  • @heatherfowell7848
    @heatherfowell7848 Před rokem

    Helpful and understandable! Thanks!

  • @randyschwager2515
    @randyschwager2515 Před 2 lety

    Great refresher!

  • @joannewalker9282
    @joannewalker9282 Před 2 lety

    Wow, well explained on HDR and use of filters. Great quick video.

  • @Akulion1
    @Akulion1 Před 2 lety

    Thanks, very well explained. I subscribed and will watch other videos of yours as well ❤️

  • @melissameyers7409
    @melissameyers7409 Před 3 lety

    Excellent and informative. Love how you pronounce “H”dr ❤️

  • @mohammadyasirkhan2709

    Thts simple 👍

  • @elsiepoynton9576
    @elsiepoynton9576 Před rokem

    Thanks love these vidios

  • @michaelroberts5160
    @michaelroberts5160 Před 3 lety

    Thank you for talking about the science of sunset photos. You challenge me to take better photos!

  • @therisingofw4479
    @therisingofw4479 Před 3 lety

    i love how you explain.i am a beginner in photography

  • @ibhatkanti
    @ibhatkanti Před 3 lety

    Good informative video.

  • @EddyHerreraCC
    @EddyHerreraCC Před 3 lety

    🔥🔥🔥

  • @marckriggins2171
    @marckriggins2171 Před 3 lety +1

    Hello Marc, my name is Marck. I appreciate your treatment of long exp and dynamics of sunset exposures, especially related to Raw. I choose to slightly underexpose because you can rover lost light (in most cases), but you cannot redeem overexposure. I have been lucky when not using a filter to slow down the shutter on a tripod and not have to use filters in preproduction, or masks in post production I consider myself a rookie only being behind a DSLR for 26 mos. Thanks, again, Marc!

  • @kurtisbaguley3786
    @kurtisbaguley3786 Před 2 lety +1

    Marc, all of the videos i have watched have been incredible. I am hooked. Yes, I am a beginner. I have a goal to not only become an educated photographer, and to be able to create pro videography as well. Does school of Photography have content for videography as well? I looked on your web site and could not find anything to this regard.
    Thanks again for all you do Sir.
    -Kurtis

    • @theschoolofphotography
      @theschoolofphotography  Před 2 lety +1

      Not at the moment Kurtis but it's something we are going to add in the future. Thanks 😊

  • @duncanmeechan5694
    @duncanmeechan5694 Před 3 lety

    This was very good information for beginner photographers, I enjoyed it and I feel it helped me just to remember the basics of how to get a decent sunrise/sunset. I do agree with Phillip Soon in the fact it might have been good to show more detail of how you used the HDR function in lightroom. I know the lesson is aimed at beginners and you probably didn’t want to get too involved in explaining everything to do with it, that’s for another lesson maybe. I would have liked to have seen you maybe show how to use the graduated filters tool in lightroom that perhaps can help you take the same shot but without carrying and fitting then lining up the filters on your camera while out in the field.
    Still it was super to watch this video and I love how you are so down to earth and that helps to get things over to us “pupils”. Lol. Thanks again Marc, keep helping us learn 😁

    • @theschoolofphotography
      @theschoolofphotography  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks Duncan, all the rest you ask for is explained here www.theschoolofphotography.com/courses/lightroom-course-online 👍

  • @carlmcneill1139
    @carlmcneill1139 Před 3 lety +4

    I started off taking sunset pictures by exposing for the highlights. The foreground would be dark. Then I got snapseed and Lightroom mobile and started taking pictures in raw. I learned that I could pull up the shadows to balance out the exposure. Next I bought a set of nd filters. I bought a cheap set that were not that good. Color casting was bad and they scratched easily. Then I spent a lot of money and bought a quality set. I did start bracketing my exposures before I had software to edit them with because I knew at some point I would be able to. I started using the HDR in Lightroom. They still didn't look the way I wanted them to look. I hardly ever use my graduated filters. I still use my 6 and 10 stop filters at times for long exposure. I decided at the beginning of last year that I wanted to learn Photoshop. I also learned about luminosity masking. I bought a plugin called Lumenzia to blend my exposures with. This has been one of the best things I have done to take my pictures to the next level. Yes it is very complex and I'm glad you brought that up. The difference between luminosity masks and using HDR or just working with a single image, I can choose specific areas in the picture to target based on luminosity venues or color tones to adjust. I can put a curves advisement on just the highlights, shadows or a certain color in the image. It's also great for dodging and burning. I can use a mask to only target those areas. But the key is to get the exposures how you need them in camera first. Then I work on each exposure in Lightroom first to get each one how I want them. I make sure the white balance is where I want it for all 3 shots. When I'm satisfied with each set I move them to Photoshop and blend them together. I've also started focus stacking my shots which makes things even trickier. If I take pictures at 4 different spots and I'm bracketing my exposures, that's 12 frames I'm taking. I think editing is as much fun as being out there taking the pictures.

    • @theschoolofphotography
      @theschoolofphotography  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks for sharing Carl 👍😊

    • @carlmcneill1139
      @carlmcneill1139 Před 3 lety +1

      @@theschoolofphotography thank you for sharing the many ways to get a good exposure. You covered everything from beginner level to advance. People can go from there to learn more.

  • @quazisanjeed6395
    @quazisanjeed6395 Před 8 měsíci

    Thank you for the video.
    I have been using GND filter for landscape photography for the last five years or so, the brand is Nisi. It's really great for resolving the problem of discrepancy in two difference areas of the frame.
    However, recently I've discovered the technique of HDR both in-camera and in DPP. This is also a great way to address the issue.
    As a hobbyist, my images are obviously not at par with pros. But the satisfaction I get by employing any of the above is mind-soothing.
    Thanks again.

  • @123vandrax
    @123vandrax Před 8 měsíci

    I really want to learn some of this stuff but have learning difficultys and get over whelmed by the learning curve

  • @psoon04286
    @psoon04286 Před 3 lety +1

    Great video, would be much appreciated if you had elaborated a little more on how you used Lightroom to achieve the HDR effect. Thanks

    • @theschoolofphotography
      @theschoolofphotography  Před 3 lety

      Thanks Phillip, that's all explained here www.theschoolofphotography.com/courses/lightroom-course-online 😊

  • @seasterl
    @seasterl Před rokem

    Thanks! This is a wealth of info! For the HDR pic of the tree, could you have accomplished that with a hard ND gradient and fill flash?

  • @HR-wd6cw
    @HR-wd6cw Před rokem

    An alternative that also works (as some people are a bit against the graduated neutral density filter since it can be done in post and won't be "burned" into your image) is to shoot on a tripod at your lowest base ISO, expose for the highlights and let the shadows fall where they are and then adjust the exposure in post. If you do this, in many cases, as long as the sky is not more than 5 stops brighter than the ground, you can get a balanced exposure without filters. It's a bit of a risk because some cameras don't retain shadow values as well as others (especailly older cameras) so shadow and dark recovery may be more limited.
    But while it is good to get something correct out of camera, I would say with sunests and sunrises, you may be better off doing 2 exposures (one for the sky and one for everything else) and merging. Yes this is two exposures and requires blending in post, but with the tools we have to do in today's RAW processors, this is a very simple process and usually can produce a better result. For one, if you exposed for both elements "correctly" you don't have to buy filters (as you would probably need different filters for different "intensities" we'll say, of sky saturation and brightness) and second this means the effect is NOT burned into your RAW image. Another technique (although probably less recommended) might be to use ETTR but this seems to not work as well with sunsets/sunrises because the DR tends to be greater so you don't gain much doing a single-ETTR shot as you would with two or three bracketed shots, which is the method I use. That way I can use the best parts of each image to get a balanced exposure without the side effects of doing something to a RAW file that cannot be reversed in post (or at least, not as easily), and the software-GND functions in programs like Photoshop and LR are quite convincing and can be non-destructive edits.

    • @flippy66
      @flippy66 Před rokem

      No, you would just exposure stack rather than bringing up shadows unnecessarily.

  • @ntauzaug9595
    @ntauzaug9595 Před 11 měsíci +1

    What about taking a portrait of a person standing against a sunset background where the person body occupy both the sky and the ground spaces?

  • @joedarm3
    @joedarm3 Před 3 lety

    For the raw file, it is preferred to make sure there is no clipping on either side. If there is, then you know there is too much dynamic range in the shot relative to capacity of camera. If that is the case, go to one of the other techniques mentioned.

  • @123vandrax
    @123vandrax Před 2 lety

    dude i wish i cud hire you for one to one tuition you make things as easy as they can be made i guess

  • @rev4c
    @rev4c Před 3 lety +1

    Hi, can you make a video about how to take cool pictures with old digital camera like a Leica Digilux 1 (4mp) for example ? thx for your work! J.

  • @patrickhin4301
    @patrickhin4301 Před 7 měsíci

    why does my raw pictures dims when i download it on my computer but it looks ok my camera lcd? Thanks

  • @123vandrax
    @123vandrax Před 8 měsíci

    How do you learn the steps to do this stuff like where to expose the focus point eg the sky middle or foreground,when to put in the filter etc and will the filter change your settings by darkening the sky before you should take the shot.I find it confusing

  • @waynechase6950
    @waynechase6950 Před 2 lety +1

    Hi Marc, great stuff, as is all your stuff is. I was wondering if you only shoot in raw, would you first convert to DNG in Light room or would you go directly into camera raw.

    • @theschoolofphotography
      @theschoolofphotography  Před 2 lety +1

      Hi Wayne, I convert my to DNGs on importanting to Lightroom. Hope that helps 👍

  • @velomaniaromania
    @velomaniaromania Před 3 lety +1

    I am taking pictures on my S10+ and have bunch of filters. The only type I need is an variable ND filters. Wanna ask for this kind of sunsets what should I buy? Hard graduated or Soft graduated filter N8?

    • @theschoolofphotography
      @theschoolofphotography  Před 3 lety +1

      Depends on the scene Velomania and explained in the video. Thanks

    • @carlmcneill1139
      @carlmcneill1139 Před 3 lety +1

      Hard grads are for clean horizons. Soft grads are for when you have mountains or uneven terrain. You only put a little bit of the area on the finger where it's gradually fading between the clear and the darkest area of the filter. Just remember that nd filters are destructive. That means the effects are permanent. It is hard to correct in post processing if you get too much of the nd filter into the scene.

  • @freaker126
    @freaker126 Před rokem

    i've been wondering why i can't get a good sunset photo. it's much easier to use my iphone and let it process everything. But, sometime, it's either you choose the sunset or the light bottom image. kinda of a hassle.

  • @123vandrax
    @123vandrax Před rokem

    How do you get the courage to start trying this stuff

  • @yosefco
    @yosefco Před 3 lety

    i dont think there is a difference between the second method you presented and hdr. they both bracketing/hdr. the fact that you used only 2 exposures or 3 exposures dosent matter really. the procudure in lightroom is much the same.

  • @cii1072
    @cii1072 Před 3 lety

    Please turn on the Closed Caption so it can be accessed.

  • @georgesmith3022
    @georgesmith3022 Před 3 lety +1

    Instead of buying expensive filters, you can expose for the highlights and bring up the shadows in lightroom

    • @nigelg4376
      @nigelg4376 Před 2 lety

      Thats been said at video if you wached it Henry