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- Newsgroups: rec.photo
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!cs.utexas.edu!torn!csd.unb.ca!news.ucs.mun.ca!cs.mun.ca!nadine.cs.mun.ca!michael9
- From: michael9@nadine.cs.mun.ca (Michael Sullivan)
- Subject: How do you photograph fire?
- Message-ID: <1992Dec22.150149.19462@cs.mun.ca>
- Keywords: fire
- Sender: usenet@cs.mun.ca (NNTP server account)
- Organization: CS Dept., Memorial University of Newfoundland
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 15:01:49 GMT
- Lines: 19
-
-
- Here in my city we've just had one of the biggest fires in fifty years. I
- happened to be in the area, and had my camera with me. Unfortunatly, I
- only had half a roll of 100 print film left, no tripod, and extream winds. :-(
-
- Anyway, how should fire be photographed in order to preserve the look and
- color of the flames, while still getting some background? It seems to me
- that when I develop the roll I'm going to find that I'll either have pictures
- with lots of flames and no background, or pictures with background and a
- big white/yellow spot where the flames are.
-
- Is it just a matter of doing some extream bracketing?
-
-
- --
- |uunet!garfield!michael9|'"Proof denies faith and without faith I am nothing,"|
- |michael9@odie.cs.mun.ca| says God. "But you have given us proof," says |
- |POB 756,St.John's,Nfld.| man, "Therefore you do not exist. QED." "Oh, my," |
- |A1S 1G8 | says God, and disappears in a puff of logic.' |
-