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A Beautiful Night, A Rant, and a Small Tutorial on Night Photography December 22, 2009

Posted by Emily in : Christmas, Church, My Handsome Husband, Princess Hannah, Utah , trackback

This weekend, we pulled out our warmest coats, hats, and gloves and headed to Salt Lake to see the Christmas lights at Temple Square.

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We haven’t been in years, (and really, I mean like 10 years . . .) but it was just as beautiful and cold as I remember.

Hannah-on-Trax

Riding on TRAX was the highlight of Hannah’s night.  It ranked right up there with attending the Nutcracker ballet.  Who needs to ride on the “Polar Express” in Heber when you can take your kid on TRAX for free?  She kept telling us we were headed to the North Pole to see the “Mo-Tab” (which, is short for “Mormon Tabernacle Choir” to us Mormons) and David and I were like, “THE MO-TAB?”  How old is she?  Who taught her that?  Where do kids pick up on lingo like that?

When she wasn’t talking about the “Mo-Tab” she was asking when her hot chocolate was going to come.

Obviously, she thought we were on the Polar Express . . .

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See this get-up here?  Not one peep out of her saying she was cold.  Not one.  (Not pictured is her big winter parka.  The kid was WARM thank goodness.)

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I think 10,000 other people had the same idea we did on Sunday night, so I had to fight a few crowds to take some pictures.

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These floating votives were so beautiful in the water with steam surrounding them.

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I experienced something new last night.  Usually when I’m out photographing, I’m by myself, photographing something that is interesting to me. When I’m doing night shots, I’m by myself 99% of the time.  Last night, 1,000 of the 10,000 people at Temple Square had the same game plan I did to get some shots of “Christmas at Temple Square.”

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However, only a handful of “serious photographers”  (SLR peeps) had a tripod on them.

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I’m now going to interject and tell why it is totally pointless to photograph in a low-light situation without a tripod:  Because your images will be blurry.

End of story.

I’m going to be completely honest here, if you have a GREAT shot that is even slightly out of focus or has even a hint of camera shake . . . it’s crap.

Is that rude?  Gosh, that’s just how I feel.  And let me tell you, I’ve deleted hundreds of good shots that were slightly out of focus.  It’s a bummer, but who wants a great composition that isn’t tack sharp?  UGH.  Not me.

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So, back to my “new experience” story . . . every time I would set up my tripod and spend a few minutes moving it around to just the right spot, other photographers would surround me on both sides trying to get the same shot I was.

Now, I want  you to know that I wasn’t flattered.  I thought it was hilarious.  I mean, they’ve never seen my work, so how do they know if I know what I’m doing?  Just because you have an SLR and a tripod doesn’t mean you take great pictures.  (We all know cameras don’t read minds.  It’s our job is to speak “camera” and that is why the 12 inches behind the camera is the most important part.)

I think Ashton Kutcher could use this experiment on “Punk’d.”  What do you think?  Have someone go to an amusement park, pull out all of their gear and have them start taking pictures of the most ridiculous stuff!  Seriously!  I guarantee people would flock to the same area to take some pictures!

The moral of this story is: Follow your own style.  Be true to your vision.  How someone else see’s the world is their perspective, not yours.  Variety is what makes art so amazing.  The same place can be photographed a million times and look different in each image because each person has put a personal stamp on how they view the world.  Don’t assume other photographers know what they’re doing just because they have equipment.

Now, to help you with your vision, I’m going to mention a few tips about night photography:

Where am I going with this post?  My intention was to tell you about how beautiful temple square is and how we’ve missed going to see the lights year after year.

However, It sounds like I may have ranted and provided a small tutorial for night photography.

That’s about that.

Comments»

1. Kristina P. - December 22, 2009

I wish I had photography skills. I got none. I love that picture of you and the family on TRAX.

2. Leigh - December 22, 2009

I just love this photo!!! Its beautiful and It has been so much fun watching you grow in your knowledge and skills as a photographer! Hannah bear is precious in those pictures and i really thought there for a second the picture on the TRAX was a one picture then I realized Hannah bear was in both shots! I wish you guys a VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS!!! I know 2010 is a very exciting year for us all!!! STABILITY :P

3. Jessi - December 22, 2009

Thanks for the tutorial and those amazing pics!! I would love that 4th one as a background! :)
I have to really start reading my manuel and start playing around with ISO and stuff like that! I have noticed all by myself that flash isnt for me. I dont like how the pics turn out! And dangit, I should have asked for a tripod for xmas. What was I thinking? I always said I dont have a wish!!

Have a great Christmas!!

4. Luone - December 23, 2009

Lovely my dear! Those temple shots are amazing!

And I agree with the “people following you because they think you know what you’re doing and they should really just do their own thing” bit!

Funny – it took me a bit of looking…the picture(s) of you and David, both w/Hannah, reminded me of the photos I used to take of Brides & Grooms, double exposure, looking at themselves kissing. Of course – this was pre-digital and was done IN CAMERA on site! But then I realized you just melded 2 pics together… Still…

5. Melanie J - January 1, 2010

Sometimes I feel like I’m surrounded by photographers. My brother and SIL were discussing a trick for shooting without a tripod the other day. It had something to do with having a string and stepping on it. Some pro photographer swears by it. Anyway, it made me laugh that they were having this whole conversation that sounded like gibberish to me but at least four other people in the room knew exactly what they were talking about.

And I think your pictures came out great.