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How to Photograph Holiday Lights
'Tis the Season to be jolly? THe season of lights - from Christmas trees to Hanukkah candles to decorative house lighting.
Lights...lights...lights to cheer up the long dark nights of winter. According to Chuck DeLaney, Dean of the New York Institute of
Photography (NYI), the world's largest photography school, your pictures can capture the magic of this lighting if you apply just one
simple professional "trick".
For example, how can your pictures capture the colorful glow of the lights on a Christmas tree? The "trick", according to NYI, is to
turn off your camera's flash! That's the key. Turn off that handy built-in flash. Because otherwise the bright light will overwhelm the
subtle tree lights in your picture. You'll need fast film and more room light to compensat, but you'll capture the show that would
otherwise be lost. Similarly, NYI recommends that you turn off your flash whenever you want to capture any subtle light source -
from Christmas trees to Menorah candles to decorative house lighting to those wonderful tree outlines produced by tiny white bulbs.
Of course, certain things follow from this: When you turn off your flash, you won't have enough light for split-second exposure. Your
automatic camera will compensate by opening the shutter for a longer time - maybe a second or longer. Let your camera's bult-in
meter decide automatically.
But a very long exposure will become blurry if either the camera moves or the tree lights move, or both. To minimize this risk, NYI
recommends two further steps. First, use fast film - for example, ISO 800. This will cut down the duration of the exposure.
Second, steady your camera. Handholding just won't do. Use a tripod if possible. If not, place the camera on a solid surface, such
as a tabletop, or brace it against a wall.
Today's fast flms make it easy to caputre the lights of your favorite winter holiday:, explains DeLaney. He adds: "One other tip for
photos of outdoor lights is to shoot at dusk or twilight. when there's still some color in the sky, instead of later when the sky is pitch
black".
For complete details and an array of great holiday photos, see the article on Holiday Lights in this month's website of the New York
Institute of Photography at New York Institute of Photography.
Copyright © 2001 New York Institute of Photography. Reprinted with permission.
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