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Time Shifting

Dwayne Oakes

New member
Thanks for taking a look !

Take care,
Dwayne Oakes

p749728526-4.jpg
 

Asher Kelman

OPF Owner/Editor-in-Chief
Dwayne,

I like your your choice of scenes to photograph, and this is certainly up to it! I wonder what the etiology of this was? Canon cameras do not give double exposures, but perhaps someone knocking the tripod can cause a jump like this! I'm not sure about my reception of the resulting "flash of white effect" after the movement. (I'm assuming of course that this is not a PS effect, somehow, that's my guess, here). My first impression is that the river becomes elevated on a platform and that's a neat effect. There's an accentuation of the passage of the river, which of course represents time.

So, I'm a little hooked on it. I have to revisit.

Thanks for sharing!

Asher
 

Dwayne Oakes

New member
Dwayne,

I like your your choice of scenes to photograph, and this is certainly up to it! I wonder what the etiology of this was? Canon cameras do not give double exposures, but perhaps someone knocking the tripod can cause a jump like this! I'm not sure about my reception of the resulting "flash of white effect" after the movement. (I'm assuming of course that this is not a PS effect, somehow, that's my guess, here). My first impression is that the river becomes elevated on a platform and that's a neat effect. There's an accentuation of the passage of the river, which of course represents time.

So, I'm a little hooked on it. I have to revisit.

Thanks for sharing!

Asher

Thank you very much Asher and Happy New Year ! Once in awhile I like to experiment in
photography and keep viewers guessing lol. You are right Asher this effect is done in-camera
using Nikon's multi exposure feature.

One photo was taken handheld and still. The other photo was taken handheld but the camera
was "shifted" moved while the shutter button was being pressed. The camera's firmware
combines the two photos together. I left a slight delay between the photos to allow the lens VR
to reset. I used slight pp to bring out the glow and changed the WB to a colder setting.

Take care,
Dwayne Oakes
 

Asher Kelman

OPF Owner/Editor-in-Chief
Multiple Exposures with a Nikon D80

Thank you very much Asher and Happy New Year ! Once in awhile I like to experiment in
photography and keep viewers guessing lol. You are right Asher this effect is done in-camera
using Nikon's multi exposure feature.

I suspected as much, but didn't want to seem over-clever!

One photo was taken handheld and still. The other photo was taken handheld but the camera
was "shifted" moved while the shutter button was being pressed. The camera's firmware
combines the two photos together. I left a slight delay between the photos to allow the lens VR
to reset. I used slight pp to bring out the glow and changed the WB to a colder setting.

I really like the idea of being able to return more of the creativity back to the process of recording the image. A glass screen for the eye piece with a set of orthogonal lines would be helpful for composing such multi-exposure shots. If the D80's multiple exposure can work with the Nikon D700, that would be very attractive! Can one first use a wide angle lens for the background and then a stronger exposure for people or the model moving to new positions?

Could one take a series of pictures in one place and then add to each of the pictures in a second location? Or does one have to take whatever series of images at tht time and one cannot go back to an image one took earlier on that card?

Asher
 

Dwayne Oakes

New member
I suspected as much, but didn't want to seem over-clever!



I really like the idea of being able to return more of the creativity back to the process of recording the image. A glass screen for the eye piece with a set of orthogonal lines would be helpful for composing such multi-exposure shots. If the D80's multiple exposure can work with the Nikon D700, that would be very attractive! Can one first use a wide angle lens for the background and then a stronger exposure for people or the model moving to new positions?

Could one take a series of pictures in one place and then add to each of the pictures in a second location? Or does one have to take whatever series of images at tht time and one cannot go back to an image one took earlier on that card?

Asher

I think yes to all of those Asher as far as the different locations it will also work I think but
you will have to leave the camera on because it defaults to the feature being turned off when
camera is powered off. Alot of possibilities for sure.

Take care,
Dwayne Oakes
 
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