Can you show your EXIF data for these shots?
There are OOF, but that might be due to wrong aperture being used.
Im not sure if these are the files that you want
Not seeing anything here Wayne.
What Rob is meaning is to post up the information on:
- the shutter speed
- the Aperture setting and,
- the ISO setting
used for the shots.
It us usually embedded into the images and with a browser (or a plug-in in some browsers) you can right click and choose 'View Exif Data'. But some processing software (like mine) strips out that EXIF data. That's why, below all the images I post, I physically write in the EXIF information.
So, Rob will have right clicked on your images and found that the EXIF data is not there.
Sorry if you already knew all that. Someone might find it useful!
Here is an "easy way" to get some night shots that I hope you will be happy with...
Make sure your camera battery is fully charged.
Take your Photos at twilight, or later.
Use your tripod
Switch off the flash
Set the ISO to say 200 (can go down to 100 if you want - this will double the exposure time and get longer light trails on cars etc)
Set the exposure mode to Aperture (A).
Set the aperture to f/8 or f/9 (use the rotating wheel just below the on/off switch)
Set up the scene using "autofocus" (check it is focusing on objects between 1/3 and 1/2 way into the scene)
Gently press the button! or preferably use a IR remote (cheap on eB*y)
Exposure should be between 1/2 and 1 second at twilight.
Here is a shot I took last month with the same camera with similar settings...
Camera Sony DSLR-A390
Exposure 1sec
Aperture f/9.0
ISO Speed 100
Once you get used to longer exposures, you can start to play around with the lights.
This is zooming during the 1 second exposure
Camera Sony DSLR-A390
Exposure 1sec
Aperture f/9.0
ISO Speed 100
Above all Wayne - have fun!
thankyou very much, I will have a go and send photos with info, I managed to attach some info on night photos