Tuesday, September 26, 2017

Bite Size Tips: How To Shoot Cityscapes That Make People Go Wow

Share on Facebook
Share on Twitter
Pin to Pinterest

While the vast majority of us live in or near a major city, as photographers it can be easy to overlook the great opportunities that help us to get some amazing photographs. Hopefully this amazing shot and tips inspire you to revisit your local scenes for some great cityscapes. Check this one out:

Image from Pexels by Zukiman Mohamad

Now here are a few tips you might want to consider if you'd like to start getting cityscape shots you can be proud of.

Choose Your Time – The blue hour is best usually for cityscape shots that really pop (the hour after sunset and before sunrise). If not, then golden hour (the hour before sunset and after sunrise). 

Sharpness Wins – Usually you want to make your image sharp and in focus. That means using a tripod and remote shutter release to minimise camera shake (especially as the light gets lower in the sky or at night). Put your camera on a stabilised position and use the timed shutter release.

You will also want to shoot with low ISO (around 100), a sharp aperture (usually around f/11 depending on your lens – Google the sweet spot for your lens), and a slower shutter speed to compensate for the ISO and aperture settings. 

Shoot Wide – For shots like this, you're going to want to go quite wide in your focal length. On a cropped sensor camera, that means somewhere between 10mm and 20mm roughly.

Bracket Exposures – If you're struggling with contrast in the scene and losing the highlights or shadows, then bracket your images (shoot several images of the same scene – one exposing for the shadows, another exposing for the highlights and another normal exposure). Then merge them in Photoshop or Lightroom to create a single image with the best exposure.


If you want to get good training on creating amazing images like the one above you should check out Art of Cityscapes.

Share on Facebook
Share on Twitter
Pin to Pinterest
The following two tabs change content below.

Dahlia Ambrose

Dahlia is a physicist and self taught photographer with a passion for travel, photography and technology. She can sometimes get obsessed trying new photography techniques and post processing styles using Lightroom or Plugins in Photoshop. She occasionally writes articles on topics that interest or provoke her. You can check out her photography on Instagram, 500px and Flickr

Latest posts by Dahlia Ambrose (see all)

Let's block ads! (Why?)


Light Stalking http://ift.tt/2yDYCK1

Sourced by Time Trap Photography sharing the best photography tips, news and tricks throughout the industry. Time Trap Photography is dedicated to freezing those special moments in life that can be revisited and admired for generations to come. - Shannon Bourque
Please visit our main site for booking availability and rates.



"Time


Receive valuable industry knowledge delivered free to your email each day.


"Time

No comments:

Post a Comment

Thank you so much for your comment. A moderator will review and approve all relevant posts. We appreciate your support and encourage you to stay with us by subscribing to our email updates. Where you can easily pick and choose what photography subjects interests you. Subscription link: http://bit.ly/photo-sub

About Us

Time Trap Photography is dedicated to freezing those special moments in life that can be revisited and admired for generations to come. - Shannon Bourque

The lens in focus

“Life is like a camera. Just focus on what’s important and capture the good times, develop from the negatives and if things don’t work out, just take another shot.” — Unknown

TIME TRAP PHOTOGRAPHY COPYRIGHT 2016