sunday school : dragging the shutter
I don’t hide the fact that I absolutely love and cherish my self-timer. In fact, I’ve come to realize that when I am in self-timer mode (pun definitely intended) my antics are a pretty good source of entertainment too. Even my photographer friends get a good laugh watching my moves—limbs flailing every which way as I balance the camera on the nearest makeshift tripod, er, tree stump, pile of rocks, parked car, get ready, get set and then run as fast as I can to get into the frame before the final beeeeeep and click. Hey, whatever it takes to get the shot and have a little fun while I’m at it.
I use the timer often, to ensure I make it into a family picture or a group shot of friends. And then there are the ever elusive self-portraits. In the case of the above image, it was surreal motion I was after. I’ve only got the Manzanita magic to thank for the golden glow of this otherworldly landscape.
The ghostly gesture comes from and intentional technique called dragging the shutter where your shutter stays open long enough to capture the movement of the subject in the shot. But when you only want some of the shot in motion (while other elements in the image stay sharp) you have to either use a flash or a tripod otherwise the movement of your own hands will cause the shot to be blurry and in this case, it won’t give you the desired results. I used a massive hunk of driftwood to prop my camera (aka my tripod) and had the ISO at 100 (even in this low light) to be sure I could really slow down the shutter enough to get an effective stream of motion. My settings were set manually- f8, .8/sec –that’s so slow you can hear the shutter open and close with a delay in between. I ran into the frame and when i heard the shutter open i moved my arms ever so slightly to get the flapping effect. Wheeeee. I'm flying!
It’s a fun thing to experiment with for sure. Just try different increments of shutter speeds until you get what you’re looking for. Do any of you drag your shutters now and again? Got any tried and true draggin’ tips? Be sure to show us what moves you.
Reader Comments (18)
http://bravo.unisonplatform.com/~marciesc/index.php?showimage=486
I'm starting to experiment with adding motion to my photos now. Although this one was purely accidental:
http://www.dolcepics.com/dailypic/on-the-go/
This past July 4th, we went over to a neighbor's house who has three little girls. They dote on my son. I was trying to get some indoor shots without using a flash, and most of them were too blurry...the girls move too fast. But I got this one that I like. My son is in the middle, in focus, while the girls flutter around him. That's my husband in the background.
http://www.mamaofletters.com/Mama_of_Letters/Camera_Happy/Pages/Nikon_D60.html#20
It was in that conversation, we came up with a new name for your tripod technique:
"McGyvering a tripod."
You may use that. ;-)
K.
My husband just told me about this technique 2 days ago, and he's been experimenting. Leave it to a shutter sister to explain it in a way I can finally grasp! ;) Thank you.
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_kLwn_jgkHkA/SK25nfB4OsI/AAAAAAAAAQQ/TNB5iYjA9lA/s1600-h/IMG_7032.jpg
http://www.flickr.com/photos/daisysharrock/2645263270/
http://www.sharrock.net/cgi-bin/mt/mt-search.cgi?search=fireworks&IncludeBlogs=1
yet somehow, I found that the blur made me love it even more?
http://www.flickr.com/photos/edarcy/2792586367/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/edarcy/2790115722/
http://stephwiese.squarespace.com/blog/month/june-2008?SSScrollPosition=176
slows life
for a photic
edge.
slows life
for a photic
edge.
I like the motion in it.
Here's an explanation of how dragging the shutter works: http://www.quickphotographytips.com/index.php/2009/04/23/drag-the-shutter-for-better-low-light-flash-photography/