Photographing Waterfalls Developed and presented by Harry O Connor oconnorhj@yahoo.com July 26, 2017* All photos by Harry O Connor * Based on May 2012 topic
Introduction Waterfall photographs are landscapes Typical landscape considerations apply: Foreground interest Leading / diagonal lines Rule of thirds Geometric shapes Framing elements Direction and quality of light Special considerations apply Flowing water Wide brightness range others Connestee Falls Near Brevard, NC 2
Special considerations Flowing water How much blur Icicle look to cotton candy look Exposure Right for the water vs. right for the rocks, etc. Right for the water vs. right for the sky Terrain Valley with shadows Open overhead leads to bright spots Limited views More often too much light than too little light 3
Waterfalls are where you find them Sometimes volume and beauty are not synonymous Looking Glass Falls Pisgah Nat l Forest, NC Unnamed flow New River Gorge, WV 4
Although you don t find many around the triangle Map from: https://www.wncwaterfalls.info/map.html Top resource: North Carolina Waterfalls, Third Edition, By Kevin Adams Published by John F. Blair, Publisher, 2016 Paperback price about $20 Note: Spotty cell coverage in rural areas makes Google Maps navigation problematic 5
Caution! Waterfall photography can be dangerous Steep drops Slippery rocks Falling / loose rocks Unexpected flows Mosquitoes and ticks Snakes, bears, other critters Poison ivy, poison oak, thorns International caution symbol from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/file:caution_sign_used_on_roads_pn.svg 6
Agenda Equipment needed or useful Basics of exposure Applying the basics of exposure to waterfall photography Some illustrative photos to discuss A few of my waterfall shots 7
Necessary / useful equipment Camera with adjustable aperture / shutter / ISO settings and filter screw-in thread Lens: wide to moderate in most situations; sometimes a telephoto gets the good shot Tripod Raingear Boots Remote release (cable or wireless) Circular polarizer Neutral density filter 8
Straight JPEG files All photos in the next section are full frame, straight from the camera card jpeg files with no modifications unless otherwise explicitly stated. 9
A polarizer reduces light and reflections It is useful to differentiate blue sky / white clouds Put it on and rotate front glass and effect is visible (meter normally) It requires an additional stop or two of exposure Without polarizer With Polarizer 120426_1516_90 200 1/1600 sec F9 120426_1516_91 200 1/320 sec F9 Note: BOTH these images had a slight levels adjustment to alleviate a somewhat muddy cast. 10
Sky polarization Rule of Thumb Strongest effect will be Where your fingers point Point your thumb at the sun 11
Sky polarization caution Too wide angle can get sky shifting from light to dark Note: It is also possible to over polarize to inky blue-black 12
A polarizer reduces light and reflections It is useful to reduce reflections in water, glass etc. (non metallic) Without polarizer With Polarizer 120420_1242_71 320 1/125 sec F8.0 120420_1243_72 800 1/100 sec F8.0 13
A polarizer reduces light and reflections It sometimes reduces unseen reflections to enhance apparent saturation Without polarizer With Polarizer 120315_1314_36 200 1/320 sec F4.5 120315_1314_37 200 1/80 sec F4.5 14
A neutral density filter just blocks light When there is too much light for the desired aperture / shutter / ISO combination, ND will block light and allow the desired setting ND filters come in whole stop increments ND name Optical density # stops ND2 0.3 1 ND4 0.6 2 ND8 0.9 3 ND16 1.2 4 ND32 1.5 5 ND64 1.8 6 Good starter, if you only buy one NOTE: For this discussion we are referring to round, screw-in ND filters. You can also get square partially clear / partially ND filters that can be placed in front of a lens to affect only part of a frame. Table derived from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/neutral_density_filter 15
Neutral density options Individual rated (NDx) Sets of rated ND (e.g. ND4, ND8, ND16 ) Variable ND Rotate amount of ND Quality? One (set) of filters for each lens filter size One (set) of filters with lens stepping rings Buy for largest, then adapters for smaller 16
Basic Exposure A scene reflects light which the eyes see The right exposure is when the camera is set to record the scene similarly to what the eyes see Three variables: Sensor sensitivity (ISO) Shutter speed (fractions of or whole seconds) Lens opening (F-stop) 17
Basic Exposure EXPOSURE TRIANGLE 100 200 400 800 1600 3200 6400 SENSOR SENSITIVITY (ISO) less Noise more Many versions of this graphic exist. Search Exposure Triangle for hundreds of hits. 18
So how do these relate? Let s use the analogy that the right exposure is a bucket full of water You can use a big bucket or a little bucket (ISO) You can fill it fast with a big stream You can fill it slow with a small stream 19
In most daylight outdoor photography there is plenty of light ISO is the sensitivity of the sensor To reduce noise a low ISO is recommended Low ISO takes more light to fill the bucket High ISO takes less light to fill the bucket 20
The right exposure is a full bucket of water Aperture is the opening in the hose Shutter speed is the time to let the water flow A coordinated hose size and flow time lead to a full bucket The gardener takes longer to fill the bucket with the small hose than the fireman takes with the large hose 21
How your camera sets exposure (Auto) It reads the light and calculates the best compromise of the three variables: Shutter ISO 4 100 2 200 1 400 1/2 Aperture 800 1/4 f64 1600 1/8 f45 3200 1/15 f32 6400 1/30 f22 1/60 f16 Probably biased toward a low ISO like 200 Probably biased toward a hand hold-able shutter like 1/125 or above Probably biased toward a mid aperture of f8 to f16 But other equal combinations exist (see ) 1/125 f11 1/250 f8 1/500 f5.6 1/1000 f4 f2.8 f2 f1.4 Note: Each camera maker and camera model has its own algorithm for exposure. 22
How to set and use your camera at waterfalls* 1. Auto ISO off; set as low as you can, 100 or 200 2. Mode to Shutter priority; S on most brands, Tv on Canons 3. Set shutter to slow speed; ¼ or ½ second a good starting point Steps 12 & 3 will result in the camera choosing the best aperture for calculated correct exposure 4. Mount on Tripod, attach cable release, screw in polarizer filter 5. Frame shot 6. Rotate polarizer to darkest setting or near darkest setting 7. Depress shutter part way and review shutter / aperture values If aperture value is high and blinks**, the scene requires a smaller physical aperture than your lens has; choice is to use ND filter or faster shutter speed 8. Take a test exposure and review as indicated on the next slide * Harry s opinion based on experience and research ** Your camera might have a different indication 23
Review your histogram and look for blinkies Under exposed --- Slower shutter or Wider aperture or Higher ISO Good overall exposure No blown highlights, Minimal blocked shadows Over exposed --- Faster shutter or Narrower aperture or Lower ISO or ND filter Most cameras can display blown highlight / blocked shadow indications with blinking warnings. Here, Blue indicates pure black, Red indicates pure white Generally, you want to minimize pure white in the water and sky by adjusting for less exposure. Histograms and blinkiessimulated in Photoshop but are similar to what is available in many cameras 24
Have Fun! Bracket Auto if you want to bracket every shot, or dial in exposure compensation for some shots Underexposed shots often the best starting point for P shop Move around Get close to or in the water (carefully!) Try slower / faster shutter speeds Get the big picture Look for interesting details Next we ll look at some samples of photos shot with different settings 25
I went to UmsteadPark to take some photos of a waterfall there to illustrate this presentation The day was overcast but bright. Note the absence of bright sun or dark shadows. You don t see a waterfall? Look closer The upcoming series of photos was taken with the camera set with ISO fixed at 100 and Mode at Shutter Priority. Then I manually decremented the shutter speed. 26
No filter 120420_1214_24 100 1/30 sec F5.0 NOTE: Real waterfalls can have much faster moving water, thus display more blur at any given shutter speed. 27
No filter 120420_1214_26 100 1/8 sec F13.0 28
No filter 120420_1215_28 100 5/10 sec F20.0 29
No filter 120420_1215_29 100 10/10 sec F25.0 30
Polarizer 120420_1221_35 100 1/15 sec F5.0 31
Polarizer 120420_1222_39 100 10/10 sec F25.0 32
Polarizer 120420_1222_40 100 20/10 sec F32.0 33
4ND 120420_1227_50 100 20/10 sec F32.0 34
Shoot RAW! The photos used to illustrate the shutter and filter points were JPEG to avoid issues of manipulation, but in real situations there is often detail available in RAW exposures in both the shadow and highlight areas that has been compressed out of the JPEG exposures. Use the sliders in basic camera raw or the Lightroomdevelop module to fine tune the overall image. All photos from this point forward are from raw images processed in Photoshop. 35
Hidden Falls Hanging Rock State Park, North of Winston-Salem > 14 foot drop 060617_1018_57 100 2 f32 36
Waterfall on Cedar Rock Creek Near Brevard NC 20 foot drop 131012_0917_30 400 1/10 11 37
BlackwaterFalls BlackwaterFalls State Park, WV Northeast corner of WV > 60 foot drop 090624_2209_95 800 1/50 f18 38
Middle Falls Near Brevard NC > 6 foot drop 111029_1035_79 800 1/4 f14 39
Thanks for listening Many hints and tips available by searching for Landscape Composition or Waterfall Photography Many locations (including free map and brochure offers) by searching NC Waterfalls If you need a copy of this presentation, or have any questions, send me a note at: oconnorhj@yahoo.com 40