From the course: Photography Foundations: Night and Low Light
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Considering motion blur
From the course: Photography Foundations: Night and Low Light
Considering motion blur
As we shoot throughout the rest of this course, we're going to be constantly fighting the problem of motion blur. Most often it's the one factor that you will base all of your other exposure decisions around. Now, while you usually never want camera shake in an image, motion blur can be a different story. Sometimes letting a moving object in your scenes smear out to blurry creates a much more interesting, compelling, and dynamic image. In fact, sometimes you need motion blur for the viewer to be able to understand what the action in the scene is. So when you're facing a moving subject, one of your first decisions is the creative choice of whether or not the motion in the scene should be blurred or frozen, and this is true no matter what type of light you're shooting in. In low light though, you'll encounter motion blur far more often, simply because dim lighting will force you to slower shutter speeds. In some cases, you won't be able to raise your shutter speed enough to freeze the…
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Working with exposure parameters in low light1m 13s
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(Locked)
Working with image sensors in low light4m 35s
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Working with shutter speed in low light3m 3s
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Considering motion blur1m 14s
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Working with ISO in low light2m 29s
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Assessing your camera's high ISO capability4m 52s
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Working with in-camera noise reduction2m 4s
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Working with aperture in low light2m 10s
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Understanding dynamic range2m 2s
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Working with color temperature and white balance1m 11s
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Exposing to the right4m 1s
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