Thanks for watching, to support this channel check our merch. ISO KEEP IT LOW t-shirt : photo-genius-5.creator-spring.com/listing/black-iso-keep-it-low?product=46
Another great video, Paul… It came at the right time also… I will be going to a local minor league baseball game this Friday for the sole purpose of getting some fireworks shots… Thank you for the info… I will send you a couple pics so you can let me know what you think!!!! Have a wonderful week, my friend….
Hi, in Malta we get various feasts in summer with spectacular areal fireworks display shows and I always attend for the best ones. Last night was the 22nd July 2023 and I attended to the feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel in Zurrieq. I set both cameras Nikon D810 and D7500 with the same settings of ISO 125, F/22 and a shutter speed of 6 seconds. The result is breath taking and the colours became brilliant.
This not only helped me with fireworks but just everything else as well! Recently got my first camera, the canon t7 and WOW. you taught me more here than anybody else ever really did. THANK YOU!!
Very good advises. I especially appreciate that You showed us the rest of the photos. That shows us that, even thou we prepare as mush as we can, still, it's not certain that we will get good photos
Great advice! I wish I had watched your video earlier. I shot fireworks for the first time last month. I did set up early and did some test shots. I played with the sutter speed between 4 and 9 seconds. I used an ISO of 320 and played with the aperture throughout the fireworks. I also went from a 17 mm angle to a 28 mm partway in. I was really surprised that out of 60 shots I got 26 usable shots and 4 that were exactly what I wanted. One shot of multiple bursts was published on the front page of the local small town newspaper. I just had a 11x17 inch blown up printed. Next time I will incorporate your suggestions. Thank you
Hello! Thank you for this tutorial I'll be taking photos of fireworks tonight for the first time. Now I know the basics I hope to get at least one good one. Thank you again.
Thanks for the tips! I'm all set up for tonight's fireworks on the Mall in Washington DC. From an 8th floor balcony overlooking the monuments it should be spectacular!
I photographed fireworks for the first time a few days ago & didnt turn off noise reduction, what a nightmare 😂 I have since learnt. I generally used 5 seconds too but i would like to try bulb next time and some tkming was off. Thabks for the videos, your photo is crisp as 👌
Thanks for sharing 👍. I've tried once a few days ago. I took a series of photos with time-lapse setting and capture some pics. The next days more fireworks will come and I am eager to try your tips. Excellent presentation, although I have a fever right now, watching the video was really enjoyable and understood.
Thank you so much for a very clear explanation of various settings. Not many channels admit that there photos went wrong. Now I know out of many clicks only few may be standout photos in situations like this. Thank you once again & will share if I get at least one usable image 😄
i have been watching you for a while and i have to say thank you for your help. i did take some fire works pic but mine are nothing like yours. one year i was under the fire works show and it was crazy, the next time i was only a few yards away from it so those pic where usless the next year i did ok but when folks do fire works out here in boise idaho there is not much of a pretty back grouns cuz we live in the deaster. but im going to keep trying and thank you for your tips . i owen a nikon D200 and i really like it it works for me. i know its old but it still take grate pic. thank you for your teaching
Paul,I always wonder how effectively and efficiently you describe and teach ! Thank you for yet another awesome tips and tricks.Expecting lot more🙏🙏👍👍👍👍
I enjoy shooting our city's Fourth of July fireworks celebration. I use most of these tips but have found to get good color, I need to shoot at f/18, ISO 100, manual mode, manual focus and shutter set to Bulb. Fireworks are very bright and it's easy to blow out the colors. I control the shutter with a cable release. At my favorite location, I use a 35 mm lens, portrait orientation, carefully focused and framed on the expected area of the sky where the bursts will occur. My shooting time varies with the number of bursts. For me, getting four to eight bursts in an image looks good; at this show, this is about six to eight seconds. Our fireworks display last 30 minutes and I usually get 120+ images. Not all of them will have the color and attractive light trails I want. Some tweaks in Lightroom for cropping, highlights, clarity and noise reduction gives me what I want. Fireworks photography is really fun and you never know what you've gotten until you review your images. Good luck.
Great tips on the video, tried fireworks for first time last night with suggested settings and I loved the results. The only difference was, we had a spot of rain at the wrong time.
Thanks Paul for your great videos. You help me remember the very basics deep in the background, so when I go out either on my shoots or going out trying new things from your videos and challenges I know how to correct my images. thanks again.
Great advice, we often do photos for the Gucci's. I personally find speeds of 2 to 3 seconds about as far as I go but its very subjective. Never tested the stabilizer but i will take your advice and turn it off,( my partner does that as well I'm sure I won't hear the end of it) lol.
Great video, keeping it simple. The ISO, shutter and aperture settings you gave were a good starting point from which we can then test when at the location. The tips on what to have witched on and off are invaluable, this is what usually catches me out! Thanks again for your videos, a thumbs up from me!
Thank you very much for your video. I had my first attempt at photographing fireworks and am extremely happy with the results - although not perfect (I know) however I've got to start somewhere and your video assisted in me getting somewhat reasonable photos. :)
I found a wired shutter control in manual settings works for me when shooting fireworks. In bulb mode I hold down the the button when I first hear the firework fire and hold it down until I capture all I want in the shot. No noise reduction of course. And press the remote down to capture the next one. Time is usually 5 seconds up to 10 seconds depending in the type of firework.
Great explanation, easy to follow and try out your settings. I most love to fo wildlife photography. Am going to shoot the independence Day rehearsal fireworks, in Singapore tomorrow. Wish me luck!😊
Great video, I learned a lot. Tomorrow July 1 is Canada Day, I’ll be shooting fireworks in Toronto. I’ve subscribed. Thanks for everything you do. #Majestic.
Awesome video as always Paul, my firework photos always turn out horrendous at best, with these tips hopefully I can get better results. Thank You again, Regards.
They are great tips thank you because I’m going to a Halloween fireworks display the weekend so thanks for your tips I watch a lot of your videos One question can I use Bulbe at a fireworks display
Hello Paul, im watching your video on How to photograph Fireworks. Your video, like the rests was so informative and easy to understand. Ive one question on the turning OFF of long exposure reduction. What will happen if one forgets to turn it ON again? Thanks much - Vincent from Singapore
Forgetting to turn stabilisation back on will only be an issue of you are shooting hand held at lower shutter speeds which is typically what IS is designed to help with (reduce camera shake). Thanks for watching.
hi! just dropping in to say thank you for the clear tips you gave! Canada is having a 3 day 20min fireworks display and it gives me time to play around with your tips. thank you so much!
Should I expose in a balanced manner or underexpose since fireworks are usually bright ? Also I learned that each camera prefers a specific f stop where images would be sharper Mine for example shoots best at 5.6 should I stick to that or go all the way to f11 ?...
Safest bet is to aim for a balanced exposure PRIOR to the fireworks starting, when the display begins the meter will read over exposure due to the fireworks, if you are shooting RAW then you should be able to fix any overexposure. Shooting at f5.6 shouldn't be a problem, remembering to focus on a part of the scene other than the actual fireworks.
Hiya i really love your channel. Ive always love photography. I want to buy a camera.but not sire what to buy. I love subjects such as, stars , moon , light,fire work plus all the normal things. Any advice would be amazing.
Choosing a camera is never easy as there are many factors to consider, budget being one of the main ones. For low light photography (you list stars , moon , firework) I would consider looking at a full frame camera which perform better in low light.
Additional tip - Firework shows often have a Grand Finale at the end and usually give you the best photo opportunities. Be ready for it. The Grand Finale may be much brighter and can wash out colors in the fireworks if you are not careful. I recommend shooting RAW+JPEG in difficult lighting situations.
Thanks for the great tips and for reposting this video. I used your advice last night to capture some great firework shots. Random side question: Do you prefer cloud based storage or an external hard drive? Which company did you go with?
I have a Leica Q2 and via the app can do a long exp of 5 sec. I can set my aperture to F11, can't kill NR, widest angle is 28mm. I live in NYC and face the East River so I have a great view of the Macy's fireworks with the caveat that I have to shoot with windows that don't open quite as wide as I would like. I have a workaround. Two questions: What should I do about white balance. Not a fan of auto white balance. What about metering? I'm not sure which metering mode to use? Thank you, I quite enjoy your videos.
I've been wanting to make a fresh video about firework photography for some time, just had to wait until we had an event on that I could attend. Thanks for watching, appreciate the feedback.
Depends largely on your budget - I've taken great shots with the Canon EF 75-300mm F4.0-5.6 III telephoto, a really cheap lens but a great starter. Alternatively for more money (but well worth it) is the Canon EF 70-300mm f4.0-5.6 IS USM II. Also check out the SIGMA AF 18-300mm F3.5-6.3 DC OIS telephoto as another option.
I'm off to Singapore in a few weeks and want to take light show photos. Are the principles for light shows and fireworks the same? Also somebody else mentioned White balance, should this be left on Auto or manually be set to say shade etc?
Laser / light shows and fireworks are similar in terms of camera settings. Auto white balance will almost certainly give inconsistent results, if you're shooting RAW this doesn't matter as you can adjust this easily in post.
For such a short show, you might have success having your camera take continue photos for the whole show. Then you would have 12 images. THe only downside is that you can't end an exposure in between the programmmed bursts like when there is a lull for several seconds in the middle of these shows.
Thanks for watching, to support this channel check our merch. ISO KEEP IT LOW t-shirt : photo-genius-5.creator-spring.com/listing/black-iso-keep-it-low?product=46
Another great video, Paul… It came at the right time also… I will be going to a local minor league baseball game this Friday for the sole purpose of getting some fireworks shots… Thank you for the info… I will send you a couple pics so you can let me know what you think!!!! Have a wonderful week, my friend….
Hi
Where can I sell my photos online to earn some money for myself
It's that 1 shot that makes it all worth it, beautiful picture mate.
Thank you 😀
Hi, in Malta we get various feasts in summer with spectacular areal fireworks display shows and I always attend for the best ones. Last night was the 22nd July 2023 and I attended to the feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel in Zurrieq. I set both cameras Nikon D810 and D7500 with the same settings of ISO 125, F/22 and a shutter speed of 6 seconds. The result is breath taking and the colours became brilliant.
Glad you got some great shots, thanks for the feedback and sharing your experience.
This guy is the "Bob Ross" of photography!! :)
🤣 love that! I’m gonna take that as a compliment Scott.
Watching this July 3rd in the USA...perfect timing!!!
Thank you, it’s July 4th in my part of the world, so happy Independence Day to you !
😀
This not only helped me with fireworks but just everything else as well! Recently got my first camera, the canon t7 and WOW. you taught me more here than anybody else ever really did. THANK YOU!!
Very good advises. I especially appreciate that You showed us the rest of the photos. That shows us that, even thou we prepare as mush as we can, still, it's not certain that we will get good photos
This also says that
Never loose faith
Thanks for watching.
Nice brief explanation of how to shoot firework. I will definitely try this technique to shoot the fireworks in the night of American Independent Day.
Thanks Andy 👏
Best instruction on taking fireworks with back of camera instruction! I'm gonna try your settings. Thanks.
You are absolutely a good teacher, thanks 😊
I use these techniques on the Independence Day and I got some amazing fireworks photos
That is awesome! thanks for sharing.
Thank you for your informative videos
Thanks for the information, I honestly thought I would want a much faster speed to get the fireworks. Now I know better.
Great advice! I wish I had watched your video earlier. I shot fireworks for the first time last month. I did set up early and did some test shots. I played with the sutter speed between 4 and 9 seconds. I used an ISO of 320 and played with the aperture throughout the fireworks. I also went from a 17 mm angle to a 28 mm partway in. I was really surprised that out of 60 shots I got 26 usable shots and 4 that were exactly what I wanted. One shot of multiple bursts was published on the front page of the local small town newspaper. I just had a 11x17 inch blown up printed.
Next time I will incorporate your suggestions. Thank you
Thanks for watching. 26 usable shots is a good hit rate when it comes to firework photography!!
Appreciate the feedback and support.
Paul.
You are amazing photographer. You are my teacher who teaches me how to take photographs. Thank you so much paul. Love from india.❤
Wow, thank you!
@@photogenius welcome sir🙏🏻😇
Hello! Thank you for this tutorial I'll be taking photos of fireworks tonight for the first time. Now I know the basics I hope to get at least one good one. Thank you again.
Thanks for the tips! I'm all set up for tonight's fireworks on the Mall in Washington DC. From an 8th floor balcony overlooking the monuments it should be spectacular!
I photographed fireworks for the first time a few days ago & didnt turn off noise reduction, what a nightmare 😂 I have since learnt. I generally used 5 seconds too but i would like to try bulb next time and some tkming was off. Thabks for the videos, your photo is crisp as 👌
Love my Nikons. I shoot with D 3 and D 750. Tank you for the videos.
Thanks for sharing 👍. I've tried once a few days ago. I took a series of photos with time-lapse setting and capture some pics. The next days more fireworks will come and I am eager to try your tips. Excellent presentation, although I have a fever right now, watching the video was really enjoyable and understood.
Thank you so much for a very clear explanation of various settings. Not many channels admit that there photos went wrong. Now I know out of many clicks only few may be standout photos in situations like this. Thank you once again & will share if I get at least one usable image 😄
Crystal clear presentation without any technical lecture thanks 👍
Excellent presentation 👏 👌 👍
thanks for your precious, yet simple tips
My pleasure 😊 thank you.
i have been watching you for a while and i have to say thank you for your help. i did take some fire works pic but mine are nothing like yours. one year i was under the fire works show and it was crazy, the next time i was only a few yards away from it so those pic where usless the next year i did ok but when folks do fire works out here in boise idaho there is not much of a pretty back grouns cuz we live in the deaster. but im going to keep trying and thank you for your tips . i owen a nikon D200 and i really like it it works for me. i know its old but it still take grate pic. thank you for your teaching
Paul,I always wonder how effectively and efficiently you describe and teach ! Thank you for yet another awesome tips and tricks.Expecting lot more🙏🙏👍👍👍👍
Thank you for the feedback and support 👏
I enjoy shooting our city's Fourth of July fireworks celebration. I use most of these tips but have found to get good color, I need to shoot at f/18, ISO 100, manual mode, manual focus and shutter set to Bulb. Fireworks are very bright and it's easy to blow out the colors. I control the shutter with a cable release. At my favorite location, I use a 35 mm lens, portrait orientation, carefully focused and framed on the expected area of the sky where the bursts will occur. My shooting time varies with the number of bursts. For me, getting four to eight bursts in an image looks good; at this show, this is about six to eight seconds. Our fireworks display last 30 minutes and I usually get 120+ images. Not all of them will have the color and attractive light trails I want. Some tweaks in Lightroom for cropping, highlights, clarity and noise reduction gives me what I want. Fireworks photography is really fun and you never know what you've gotten until you review your images. Good luck.
Great tips again Paul. Thank you
Great tips on the video, tried fireworks for first time last night with suggested settings and I loved the results. The only difference was, we had a spot of rain at the wrong time.
Thank you for such great advice. I love your channel. As a new photographer, your teachings are so easy to follow. Thanks.
You are so welcome, appreciate the kind words and support.
Thanks so much for this. Helped me loads yesterday evening and I got some great shots. My first time photographing fireworks. Great video 👌
Very nicely explained covering all vital aspects for such difficult task
Thank you.
Great photo lesson, very clear and efficient thank you..
You're very welcome, appreciate the kind feedback.
Great thanks will try tonight hopefully
Another good tip, Thanks Paul
No problem 👍 😀
Bro you are helping me beyond belief
Can't wait to practice this on new year. Thanks, paul. 😁
Thanks for watching Trent.
Thanks Paul for your great videos. You help me remember the very basics deep in the background, so when I go out either on my shoots or going out trying new things from your videos and challenges I know how to correct my images. thanks again.
You are welcome Martin, thanks for the feedback.
Great advice, we often do photos for the Gucci's. I personally find speeds of 2 to 3 seconds about as far as I go but its very subjective. Never tested the stabilizer but i will take your advice and turn it off,( my partner does that as well I'm sure I won't hear the end of it) lol.
Great video, keeping it simple. The ISO, shutter and aperture settings you gave were a good starting point from which we can then test when at the location. The tips on what to have witched on and off are invaluable, this is what usually catches me out! Thanks again for your videos, a thumbs up from me!
Glad it was helpful! Thanks for the feedback.
Thank you very much for your video. I had my first attempt at photographing fireworks and am extremely happy with the results - although not perfect (I know) however I've got to start somewhere and your video assisted in me getting somewhat reasonable photos. :)
Thanks Paul great video
Very welcome, thank you.
Well-timed video, with the Brisbane show coming up, I thought it would be a good time to try some fireworks photography. Saved me searching RUclips.
Absolutely Dean, the Ekka will be a great place to shoot... might even see you there 😃
I found a wired shutter control in manual settings works for me when shooting fireworks. In bulb mode I hold down the the button when I first hear the firework fire and hold it down until I capture all I want in the shot. No noise reduction of course. And press the remote down to capture the next one. Time is usually 5 seconds up to 10 seconds depending in the type of firework.
Sounds great, bulb mode is useful - thanks for watching.
Awesome tips!! Thank you!!👌
You're so welcome Gabriela, thank you so much 👏
A very useful tips, as usual and thank you.
My pleasure!
Hi Paul, More useful information as ever. Thanks for sharing.
My pleasure Steve - thank you.
Brilliant tutorial mate. Well played.
Thanks for the fireworks tips.. I’ll be looking forward to some this NYE… (fingers crossed)
Great explanation, easy to follow and try out your settings. I most love to fo wildlife photography. Am going to shoot the independence Day rehearsal fireworks, in Singapore tomorrow. Wish me luck!😊
Great video thank you. Do I need to adjust any of the other settings like white balance?
Great video, I learned a lot. Tomorrow July 1 is Canada Day, I’ll be shooting fireworks in Toronto. I’ve subscribed. Thanks for everything you do. #Majestic.
Excellent video, nicely detailed and helpful. Thanks very much!
Great video! I appreciate how you explain things concisely and in layman's terms, making the subject understandable. Thank you.
You are very welcome Shayne, appreciate the feedback and support.
Great explanation and I liked the presentation, good luck always
Much appreciated! Thank you.
Awesome video as always Paul, my firework photos always turn out horrendous at best, with these tips hopefully I can get better results. Thank You again, Regards.
Happy to help Paul, thank you.
Excellent Content Paul.. Thanks for helping us learn photography the fun way
My pleasure 👍
They are great tips thank you because I’m going to a Halloween fireworks display the weekend so thanks for your tips I watch a lot of your videos
One question can I use Bulbe at a fireworks display
Hello Paul, im watching your video on How to photograph Fireworks. Your video, like the rests was so informative and easy to understand.
Ive one question on the turning OFF of long exposure reduction. What will happen if one forgets to turn it ON again? Thanks much - Vincent from Singapore
Forgetting to turn stabilisation back on will only be an issue of you are shooting hand held at lower shutter speeds which is typically what IS is designed to help with (reduce camera shake).
Thanks for watching.
Thanks Paul you explain it so simply your image was stunning 👍
Glad you enjoyed it, thank you for the feedback and for supporting my channel.
I love your channel. I've never done fireworks before. Thanks for the tips.
You are so welcome Bob, thanks for the feedback.
Very informative 👍
Very well done and helpful video!
And another great informative, and easily explained video. Cheers Paul 👍
hi! just dropping in to say thank you for the clear tips you gave! Canada is having a 3 day 20min fireworks display and it gives me time to play around with your tips. thank you so much!
Hope you get some great shots!! Thanks for the feedback and support.
Would you suggest that turning off those settings is also needed for all forms of photography?
When I saw the subject for this video, my first thought was you should have had this before the 4th of July. I didn’t think about the Olympics.
Lol. I said the same
Dont you mean the 26th of January!?
@@gunsandhoses343?
Love the content ! Please keep it coming in really learning alot from you ! THANKS !
You're welcome Thomas, thanks for the kind feedback.
Amazing tips
Glad you like them! Thank you.
Great advice!
Glad you think so Oscar, thanks for watching.
Thanks!
Thank you so much for supporting me and my channel.
Much appreciated, Paul @ Photo Genius
Very Helpful 🙌💞
Happy to help, thanks for watching.
Thank you sir, for this video with very useful tips and know-how. Can we use continuous shots instead of single shot?
Continuous shooting requires holding the shutter button down and would not suit this type of (long exposure) photography.
Should I expose in a balanced manner or underexpose since fireworks are usually bright ?
Also I learned that each camera prefers a specific f stop where images would be sharper
Mine for example shoots best at 5.6 should I stick to that or go all the way to f11 ?...
Safest bet is to aim for a balanced exposure PRIOR to the fireworks starting, when the display begins the meter will read over exposure due to the fireworks, if you are shooting RAW then you should be able to fix any overexposure. Shooting at f5.6 shouldn't be a problem, remembering to focus on a part of the scene other than the actual fireworks.
Thanks Paul.
Hiya i really love your channel. Ive always love photography. I want to buy a camera.but not sire what to buy. I love subjects such as, stars , moon , light,fire work plus all the normal things. Any advice would be amazing.
Choosing a camera is never easy as there are many factors to consider, budget being one of the main ones. For low light photography (you list stars , moon , firework) I would consider looking at a full frame camera which perform better in low light.
Excellent
Thank you so much.
Additional tip - Firework shows often have a Grand Finale at the end and usually give you the best photo opportunities. Be ready for it. The Grand Finale may be much brighter and can wash out colors in the fireworks if you are not careful. I recommend shooting RAW+JPEG in difficult lighting situations.
Thanks for the tip definitely going to try it out tomorrow
Let me know how it turns out.@@etmamsaadat9468
Amazing sir 👍🤝
Thanks ✌️
Thank you very much!
Great vid, mate!
Glad you enjoyed it, thanks for watching.
I have always liked your photo tutorial. Crisp concise and coherent. Now I would like to send some of my pictures for your opinion. How can I do that?
Thanks for the support. I'm unable to give personal image critique at the moment I'm afraid.
Thanks for the great tips and for reposting this video. I used your advice last night to capture some great firework shots. Random side question: Do you prefer cloud based storage or an external hard drive? Which company did you go with?
Paul, what are you thoughts of also incorporating "interval/time-lapse". Say for example 5 sec shutter, with interval of around 10 seconds?
Amazing tips...thanks...what happened with your hand Paul? I saw some bruises on your right hand...
Thanks for your concern, it's a large scratch from playing with our over enthusiastic dog (sharp claws)... looks worse than it is.
you must get a new wave of views every year on New Years Eve!!!
Hi from Austria 🇦🇹
Hi back from Brisbane, great to have you on board, appreciate the support - thank you.
love all videos .have a hard time setting my Nikon D7200 for Air show mode. Need Help please.
1 minute bro??🙉 here for Fourth of July Macys does like around 30mins..its insane🤯
Thank yo for the Amazing tips sir,
i also have a Kit lense wiil use the same settings.❤
Glad it was helpful!, thanks for the feedback.
Excellent Paul, thank you. I think we should have a display here in Sydney when lockdown ends! :-)
That would be cool! You deserve it, keep safe and well Jim.
I have a Leica Q2 and via the app can do a long exp of 5 sec. I can set my aperture to F11, can't kill NR, widest angle is 28mm. I live in NYC and face the East River so I have a great view of the Macy's fireworks with the caveat that I have to shoot with windows that don't open quite as wide as I would like. I have a workaround. Two questions: What should I do about white balance. Not a fan of auto white balance. What about metering? I'm not sure which metering mode to use? Thank you, I quite enjoy your videos.
nice vid thanks! Subbed.
Thanks for the sub, much appreciated.
Love the video, only wish you were about a month earlier for Independence Day here in America lol.
I've been wanting to make a fresh video about firework photography for some time, just had to wait until we had an event on that I could attend.
Thanks for watching, appreciate the feedback.
Great video Paul. What would be a good all round canon lens with zoom ? I have a 18- 55 kit lens at the moment
Depends largely on your budget - I've taken great shots with the Canon EF 75-300mm F4.0-5.6 III telephoto, a really cheap lens but a great starter. Alternatively for more money (but well worth it) is the Canon EF 70-300mm f4.0-5.6 IS USM II. Also check out the SIGMA AF 18-300mm F3.5-6.3 DC OIS telephoto as another option.
@@photogenius Thank you very much
@@photogenius Hi Paul, is the Canon 55-250 is stm lens as good as the cheaper version of the Canon 75-300 lens?
Please consider a video about astrophotography.
I'm off to Singapore in a few weeks and want to take light show photos. Are the principles for light shows and fireworks the same? Also somebody else mentioned White balance, should this be left on Auto or manually be set to say shade etc?
Laser / light shows and fireworks are similar in terms of camera settings. Auto white balance will almost certainly give inconsistent results, if you're shooting RAW this doesn't matter as you can adjust this easily in post.
It surprises me that the fireworks only lasted a minute for an event that comes every 4 years
Thanks
Hi! I may have missed this in the video but what do you set your WB to when shooting fireworks? Thanks
For such a short show, you might have success having your camera take continue photos for the whole show. Then you would have 12 images. THe only downside is that you can't end an exposure in between the programmmed bursts like when there is a lull for several seconds in the middle of these shows.
Think that's called a movie