Thanks so much for your kind words Henry, great to hear you are liking my tutorials. Thanks for watching, commenting and subscribing... and welcome to the community 😁👍
Thanks for the reply, Mike if you would like to see some of my photography in my RUclips profile it would be awesome, I do mostly bird photography 👍🐦 take care.
I'm a sony shooter, but i love that you still show other camera's. and for the sony, you even show the old menu AND the new menu wihtout dragging the video longer, just pure gold, THANKS!! subbed
Ehi Mike, I'm into photography for less than 2 months, and let me say that you are one of the best creator I'm watching constantly. I really like the way you explain techniques and the infographic you use to support that, I like the sweet mix of all around topics with deep technical subjects. Last but not least, I love how say things, clean and simple. Keep on mate!
This is why I make these videos ... I love helping people with their photography and hearing that they are helping you and your photography really inspires me to make more!! I have lots more to come!! Thanks for watching Pietro 😁👍
Jam-packed, no time-wasting. I always get things (plural) from you. Trying to up my game from the dad with a good camera (pre smart phone days that era). A chunk to absorb for me and I don't have time for channels who think showing me their portfolio after 10 minutes for one snippet is good. Some of them I wonder how much they actually know to be honest......THANKS!
Great to hear you like my videos James! The main reason I started this channel was because of channels talking about their life story before getting to the point. No need for any of that... get in, deliver the info, and then get out!! Thanks for watching 😁👍
Thanks mate for the very thorough and comprehensive "walk through" on the subject of shooting multiple exposures bracketing. I believe you covered "all the bases" leaving no one with any questions.
Mike, you never fail to teach me something new. I've been using bracketing for awhile, but never realized what happens when ISO is in auto vs fixed or in aperture priority mode. Thanks!
Thats great to hear! It is amazing seeing what happens when you change a certain setting within the functions of the camera. This is one of the downsides of shooting in manual with auto iso, as soon as you switch it to bracketing, you have to come out of auto iso so you change shutter speed. Thanks for watching 😁👍
I started exposure bracketing after watching a video you made many years ago. You brought up a great point in this video about using it to determine what your individual taste for a photograph really is. I found after a lot of trial and error, that point zero seven under-exposed was my sweet spot for most photos. Sorry, didn't mean to speak American, point nought seven for you Brits. When I would bring my bracketed sets in to edit, I usually always ended up making the overall photo look something like that .07 underexposed frame. Anyway, fantastic technique for static shots. My seven year old grandson and I are knee deep in making green screen videos at the moment. We are flying through the air, swimming with sharks, running from dinosaurs, bears and lions and various other scenarios, all from the comfort of our living room. I hope you and yours are well, my friend.
Haha!! It's ok, I'm bilingual!! 😆 That sounds brilliant, green screens are a lot of fun and you can do so much these days!! We're all good thanks!! As always thanks for watching dude 😁👍
I hardly comment on any RUclips video.. Been following many photography channels but you sir.. are the best. You have perfectly given all aspects of the topic within 12 minutes. Just the required relevant information; sharp, clear and pinpoint. Subscribed ! Thanks for the great work 🙌
Thanks so much for your kind words Prasad! I have a lot of fun writing, filming and editing these videos so it is great to hear they are helping! I have a lot more to come as well!! Thanks so much for watching, commenting and subscribing, much appreciated. 😁👍
You are I think the first youtuber I just subscribed by pausing your video midway. Like the content you made is so great I had to pause to make sure I dont miss your future videos. Thank you sir!!
Thank you for this super helpful video. I am a hobby photographer. I use a Canon 5D Mark iii. The 10:00 mark of this video is super helpful as I use Lightroom and Photoshop.
Learnt bracketing from you, but if you're doing a hdr wide pano,, it's a real pain to post process, long winded, lol. Thank you for your help on tutorial videos
They do take a while don't they! I only do them every now and then but when you get a good one it is well worth the effort. As always thanks for watching 😁👍
Very good show of the many options, BRAVO! Here's a little extra, Bracketing started mainly due to low dynamic range of cameras but got may images looking like cartoons but just a phase! I experimented to get a moon in focus and sharp while also getting a bright foreground ISO/SS are equal and F is 8 to 11 for focus. ISO/SS 125 F=10 center shot .5s last shot will be 30s but if you increase ISO/SS the last shot will be the brightest any way just a different center. The reason back in 2010 and such PS/Lr was $800+ each and each update/upgrade and my first Canon T2i and two lenses were $850 in 2010, Yes today in PS you can just blend a moon in like the days of dark rooms. But remember to keep the moon the size of your thumb held out in front. Also no lens will get you the size moon the way you see it and also a full size full ground the way you see it due to your peripheral vision. Today doing 5 @ +/-2EV during blue hour will get you bright foreground as well as stars and if done with sun up above horizon the sun will be small and not blown out and instead of silhouettes in the foreground the dark side of things will be bright and sharp with great detail also for sunsets both times will get great color to play with. A driftwood beach is great place to test, and if you use f/22 you may capture a drawing in the sand nature drew.
Another great video, Mike! It's great to hear about techniques some people have no idea about. HDR sure have come a long way though in the early days they never looked good. Unless you did everything yourself. Stay safe and warm out there.
Thanks so much Lance! You're right, I remember when her first came out. The photos some people produced just looked weird. Nowadays it's very much a tool to give us a little more latitude when editing. As always, thanks for watching my friend 😁👍
Great stuff Mike,, I find my Nikon d90 or my d300 really good bracketing burst button ,,easy peasy , most times I just use the exposure compensation dial so used to it , your videos are better than Tesco adds ,,every little helps,,, congrats great video as per I never expect anything less.
Exactly!! I have bracketing on all the time with my drone. I also take at least 10 photos of one scene when the dynamic range is small enough for the camera to handle, and then stack them to reduce the noise. As always thanks for watching dude! 😁👍
Haha!! I'm actually an AI droid linked in to google ... we know what you are thinking at all times!! 😆😆 Not really ... 🤔 In all seriousness, it is well worth learning. If you go out and the conditions aren't that great, it is worth just trying it out and then blending them together when editing even if you don't need the extra dynamic range. This will show you how it works without the worry of whether or not you got the shot. Thanks for watching 😁👍
@@mikesphotography omg please no android-mike 😂 Thanks again. Well, I have to admit, that I'm one of those that ended up with over- or underexposed shots from time to time and this is the solution/answer🙌
Great tutorial as always! Thank you. This inspired me to try bracketing. I have a question. Could you please make a tutorial on how to combine exposure bracketing with panorama stitching in order to get that absolute epic shot.
Thanks so much and great to hear I have inspired you to try this. It is well worth learning! That would be a good one to do ... I'll add it to the list. Thanks for watching 😁👍
So I watched this video yesterday and you inspired me to give it a go. So I was out earlier and took a load of photos using the 3 shots method. I haven't put them together in Lightroom yet, but I look forward to putting them together and seeing the results!
@@mikesphotography Thanks! I think the lighting when I took the pictures must have been fine as most of the HDRs ended up looking like the normally exposed picture, even with adjustments there was little difference for me. So I'm guessing the lighting was fine, I did notice some subtle differences on some of the HDRs. But I will be trying again in future if the lighting isn't as good. It's still a great method, of course!🙂
Compelling post, Mike. Covers much detail. Showing different camera brands, a plus. Same for depth of field caution. Spot-on thumbnail. I don’t follow the advice about not using auto-white balance, though. Unlike a pano, where different image segments might have different temperatures, wouldn’t the WB be expected to be constant for the scene - unless each frame is taken hours apart. For occasional bracketing, my preference would be to use the exposure compensation dial method you showed. No table this time, but there was a bench in background.😊 Cheers!
There was a table in there, but it was a little undercover ... at 0:16 . You're right with auto white balance, but sometimes if you're shooting long exposure times and the sun is coming in and out, this could change it a little. I tend to switch to the bracketing function in the drive mode and then switch back, but the exposure compensation option is a great way to do it, especially with cameras like Sony and Fuji having a dedicated EC dial. As always thanks for watching Paul 😁👍
Thanks for your video Mike! For someone who is a newbie to exposure bracketing, the way you explain how it works, I understood without any problem by first viewing. Each sentence you say is precise and to the point. I just subscribed to your channel !!
Mike, WOW! Your explanations are amazing. Thank you. You have a new subscriber. I'm fairly new but know the basics. Your explanation of the histogram is second to none! Now I just need more practice.
Thanks so much for your kind words Matt! Great to hear I have been able to help. Thanks for watching and thanks for subscribing, welcome to the community 😁👍
i have just recently got into photography again, after viewing your landscape videos about compotition i just went ahead to my nearest reservoir and start taking pictures there, it was better than my previous shots. cant wait to try these one on my next trip as well, and if you could please do these types of videos again (esp lenses, since i have mini budget and couldnt choose beetween prime and zoom lenses).
Haha! I used to when we lived in Dubai, but I haven't done any for a while ... basically since covid. I would but Rich Baum has already done a load of amazing videos on that very subject: www.youtube.com/@RichBaum/videos Check out his channel. 😁👍
Another wonderful & very helpful video Mike, i have not attempted Bracketing yet, however i will add it into my Photography learning journey. I also shot with Sony so the advice on menus was useful also
No worries, I hope it has helped. I did a video recently on focus stacking: ruclips.net/video/1_HhjFwPUf4/видео.html Hopefully that'll help with what you are looking for. Thanks for watching 😁👍
This video just earned a subscriber! Thanks so much! I've been shooting for a couple years and knew about bracketing but didn't really understand it until now Thanks again!
Good vlog, thanks. Nearly always bracket and mainly by hand, in continuous mode (3 shots).Most shots are at a fast enough shutter speed. Try not to use a tripod unless essential. Use either Lightroom or Aurora HDR to blend.
I've been doing photography since 2019, I just now learned about bracketing... I thought it was a manual thing that had to be done lol i been doing it the hard way for years...
So that's how it's done!! What a brilliant explanation (complete with demonstrations) of a feature I've often thought about but never tried. And you gave Fuji a mention, too... this has to be the best video ever! 😉😂. I now have my camera in front of me and playing with the bracketing settings. Cheers Mike, great work 👌🏼😊
UPDATE: just used it in the back garden and dragged the images over to Affinity Photo. Wow, that was simple! Thanks for the great tip and easy-to-follow guidance on using that setting 🥳🙌🏼
Haha! You never know, one day I might even buy a Fuji camera ... 🤔 It is such a simple way to get a bigger dynamic range from your camera ... and I have to admit, I do the lazy shooter thing of using this to get multiple exposures of the same scene a lot, so I know I will have a good exposure in there somewhere!! 😆 That's great that affinity has a blending option as well! 👍
@@mikesphotography you know I've a Fuji or two you can borrow if you think you're up for the APSC challenge 😉 🤣 And answer your website messages, I'm a potential customer! 😁👌🏼
Great video! As someone who can have difficulty staying focused at times, this video was great because you kept changing the camera angle. It may be a small thing, but it really does help!! I was just wondering if you have any recommendations for bird photography. I am new to photography and when I went out to take photos of birds I found myself spending a lot of time adjusting my exposure compensation/brackets. I think I was in the wrong mode though, I was testing out aperture and shutter priority modes, but I just learned you should be in manual with auto ISO, because low aperture and high shutter speed is critical for bird photography. It would be awesome to see a video by you on a video on bird photography since you teach so well! (Unless you already have made one.) Thanks!!
Thanks very much! great to hear I was able to keep your focus. The whole idea behind changing angles came out of me messing my lines up so much, and hating jump cuts. 😆 Bird and wildlife photography is a tricky genre to master. You do need to keep your shutter speed high, especially when you are using a really long telephoto. I haven't shot many birds, but I'd say to keep it in either shutter priority or manual with auto iso, but keep an eye on your iso levels as you shoot. Then use exposure compensation to quickly change the settings when necessary. It is a case of going out as much as possible until you find a technique that works for you. IF you are not getting the results you want, find out about another way and then try that. It's good to have somewhere close to where you live so when you have some time, you can quickly and easily go out and shoot. I know a lot of bird photographers have a bird-table in their back garden and practice with the local wildlife until they know how to get good shots, before heading out somewhere in the wild. I hope that helps. Thanks for watching 😁👍
Each episode is so useful. I've written down several photography tips and couldn't wait to go out and give myself a try. By the way, what camera are you using to vlog yourself and how is your setup? Thanks again for your wonderful videos. 🙏🏼🙏🏼
Great to hear my videos are helping! I shoot these with the Sony A7C and the Tamron 17-28mm f2.8... with the hollyland lark wireless mic and the whole setup on a small ulanzi travel tripod. With the handheld shots, I use the gyro stabilisation to steady the shots as I don't use a gimbal, and they come out surprisingly steady considering its all handheld. I hope that helps and Thanks for watching 😁👍
Great video and very clear explanation. A couple of questions ; why did you opt for ISO 100 rather than 50? What is the advantage of using Multi exposure mode over lets say entire screen average. I would have thought 'entire screen average' would return more consistent results....but there is a great chance of me being mistaken on that! What do you think?
It would be highly appreciated if you could create a video detailing how to make money as a landscape photographer..Great work as always. I'm a big fan.
Nice video Mike! My fifty cents: before taking a bracketed shot, apart from having a stable tripod and use the self-timer, one should also turn off the VR or IS of their lens. Actually, this should be off everytime one uses a tripod. Wide angle lenses won't cause much of a problem but still...
Ah yes, good point. With DSLRs and third party lenses this is vital. I did a video a while back now where I tested ibis from a tripod and it didn't seem to be as important as when I used to shoot with Canon cameras. Thanks for watching and thanks for the tip 😁👍
Many thanks for sharing, bracketing is a cracking way of learning the settings and using them next time, I did pickup that your camera takes all 3 or 5 shots at the same time, I have to keep my finger on the shutter to do it. How do you get it to take all the bracketed shots for you. Have tried various ways and struggling to do this. Many thanks
No worries, great to hear it has helped. If you shoot with Sony cameras, there is a "bracket settings" in one of the many menu options. Go to this and select the timer to 2 seconds or more, and then shoot in BKT-C setting in the drive mode, this will then set a timer and shoot them all in one go. I don't have me camera with me at the moment, so can't remember the exact menu options, but I think that should get you there. If you shoot with a different brand, they all should have this option and there will probably be a video on it. Thanks for watching 😁👍
Were you in peak district? I was in Edale last week and look super familiar :D Thanks for the tutorial! I didn't know about this feature and was doing manually and lost a good picture because I moved a bit while changing.
It looks quite Peaky doesn't it... I actually filmed this near Dolgellau in Mid Wales, on the Precipice walk. It does look a lot like Edale doesn't it! It is well worth knowing about bracketing exactly for reasons like you mentioned. Nothing worse than having your camera move between shots. Thanks for watching 😁👍
Hi Mike, when you are merging in light room you never mentioned processing the raw photographs! Does light room do that automatically when merging? Good video by the way
@@mikesphotography The pro version got updated to v7 back in February of this year. I can now preview in batch processing and save the resulting image in 32bit DNG files.
I don't like the ransom based model of Adobe (subscription). I bought Photomatix v6 pro years ago and got free upgrade to v7. I am using Acdsee photo studio ultimate for digital asset management, development and editing. All perpetual license, no ransom Adobe crap.
REALLy enjoyed your video! Just a quick question! what is the name of the product that you are using with at the shoulder of your bag pack to put your camera mwhile not using it ??? (at 8:09 beneath the logo of your backpack)
Thanks a lot for the video! Anyway, I"d like to ask - is there anyone with Lumix (and S1 in particular) and could give some hints? S1 menu is a bit more complicated 😅
It looks like this video will help you in finding exposure bracketing: ruclips.net/video/b-dOXSFWEBk/видео.html I hope that helps. Thanks for watching 😁👍
Hello, this has been a great video. I'm new to photography and setup bracketing on my sony a7iii for 3 pictures 2 seconds apart. However I only see one picture , not 3 when I review the frames. Is there another setting I need to configure ? Thanks !
Are you shooting in BRK-S or BRK-C? The 2 second delay is at the start of the sequence, and you need to be in BRK-C so it will take all three in one go. If you are in BRK-S with the 2 second timer, you need to press the shutter for each of the three shots in the sequence. I hope that helps. 😀👍
@@mikesphotography thanks for this info. I also watched another of your videos and was able to get this working. Your videos are well organized and easy to understand . Perfect for new photographers like me !
Picture profiles are more for video files where there is very little scope for editing with the lack of data in the 8bit files. With photography, it is better to shoot in RAW as this has all the information saved by the sensor, without the need to shoot in such a flat profile.
Your video production is excellent.
Thanks so much Bob!! I have a lot of fun writing, filming and editing my videos so great to hear you like them!
Thanks for watching 😁👍
I love how you explain all of this without all the extra things that isn't need, Got yourself another sub man. I'm officially invested in you.
Thanks so much for your kind words Henry, great to hear you are liking my tutorials.
Thanks for watching, commenting and subscribing... and welcome to the community 😁👍
Thanks for sharing another wonderful video like always 👍🤗
No worries Miguel, great to hear you liked it!! I hope you have a great weekend!!
As always thanks for watching 😁👍
Thanks for the reply, Mike if you would like to see some of my photography in my RUclips profile it would be awesome, I do mostly bird photography 👍🐦 take care.
I'm a sony shooter, but i love that you still show other camera's. and for the sony, you even show the old menu AND the new menu wihtout dragging the video longer, just pure gold, THANKS!! subbed
That bit about not using auto ISO or Shutter-Priority, mind blown! Made sense too!
That's great to hear it has helped!!
Thanks for watching 😁👍
Ehi Mike, I'm into photography for less than 2 months, and let me say that you are one of the best creator I'm watching constantly. I really like the way you explain techniques and the infographic you use to support that, I like the sweet mix of all around topics with deep technical subjects. Last but not least, I love how say things, clean and simple. Keep on mate!
This is why I make these videos ... I love helping people with their photography and hearing that they are helping you and your photography really inspires me to make more!!
I have lots more to come!!
Thanks for watching Pietro 😁👍
I can't agree more.
Jam-packed, no time-wasting. I always get things (plural) from you. Trying to up my game from the dad with a good camera (pre smart phone days that era). A chunk to absorb for me and I don't have time for channels who think showing me their portfolio after 10 minutes for one snippet is good. Some of them I wonder how much they actually know to be honest......THANKS!
Great to hear you like my videos James! The main reason I started this channel was because of channels talking about their life story before getting to the point. No need for any of that... get in, deliver the info, and then get out!!
Thanks for watching 😁👍
amazing tutorial to understand bracketing
Thanks very much Dr Kumar!
Thanks for watching 😁👍
Thanks mate for the very thorough and comprehensive "walk through" on the subject of shooting multiple exposures bracketing. I believe you covered "all the bases" leaving no one with any questions.
I think I learned more about landscape photography settings for my camera and what they do in these few mins than in the last 5 years!
Great to hear I could help you understand this setting in your camera Kenny!
Thanks for watching 😁👍
@@mikesphotography no thank you for being straightforward with your explanation!
I looked for this everywhere they just talk and talk. You just show us every step how to do it. Thank you.
Mike, you never fail to teach me something new. I've been using bracketing for awhile, but never realized what happens when ISO is in auto vs fixed or in aperture priority mode. Thanks!
Thats great to hear! It is amazing seeing what happens when you change a certain setting within the functions of the camera.
This is one of the downsides of shooting in manual with auto iso, as soon as you switch it to bracketing, you have to come out of auto iso so you change shutter speed.
Thanks for watching 😁👍
One of the best LE photography vids on here.
Excellent advice, many thanks!
Thanks so much for your kind words!
... and thanks for watching 😁👍
This is the most concise 12 minute photography video I've ever seen. From beginning to end fantastic job!
I started exposure bracketing after watching a video you made many years ago. You brought up a great point in this video about using it to determine what your individual taste for a photograph really is. I found after a lot of trial and error, that point zero seven under-exposed was my sweet spot for most photos. Sorry, didn't mean to speak American, point nought seven for you Brits. When I would bring my bracketed sets in to edit, I usually always ended up making the overall photo look something like that .07 underexposed frame. Anyway, fantastic technique for static shots. My seven year old grandson and I are knee deep in making green screen videos at the moment. We are flying through the air, swimming with sharks, running from dinosaurs, bears and lions and various other scenarios, all from the comfort of our living room. I hope you and yours are well, my friend.
Haha!! It's ok, I'm bilingual!! 😆
That sounds brilliant, green screens are a lot of fun and you can do so much these days!!
We're all good thanks!!
As always thanks for watching dude 😁👍
Fantastic presentation Mike. I have only found you this morning but am hooked and will watch the rest of your videos very soon. Thanks. Ken
Thanks very much Ken!! I have a lot of videos in my back catalogue so there's plenty to choose from.
Thanks for watching 😁👍
Great video sir, simple, concise and informative. Answered every question I had. Thank you 👍
I hardly comment on any RUclips video.. Been following many photography channels but you sir.. are the best. You have perfectly given all aspects of the topic within 12 minutes. Just the required relevant information; sharp, clear and pinpoint. Subscribed ! Thanks for the great work 🙌
Thanks so much for your kind words Prasad!
I have a lot of fun writing, filming and editing these videos so it is great to hear they are helping! I have a lot more to come as well!!
Thanks so much for watching, commenting and subscribing, much appreciated. 😁👍
You are I think the first youtuber I just subscribed by pausing your video midway. Like the content you made is so great I had to pause to make sure I dont miss your future videos. Thank you sir!!
Thank you for this super helpful video. I am a hobby photographer. I use a Canon 5D Mark iii. The 10:00 mark of this video is super helpful as I use Lightroom and Photoshop.
Great to hear I could help Matt!
Thanks for watching 😁👍
Learnt bracketing from you, but if you're doing a hdr wide pano,, it's a real pain to post process, long winded, lol. Thank you for your help on tutorial videos
They do take a while don't they! I only do them every now and then but when you get a good one it is well worth the effort.
As always thanks for watching 😁👍
Very good show of the many options, BRAVO! Here's a little extra, Bracketing started mainly due to low dynamic range of cameras but got may images looking like cartoons but just a phase! I experimented to get a moon in focus and sharp while also getting a bright foreground ISO/SS are equal and F is 8 to 11 for focus. ISO/SS 125 F=10 center shot .5s last shot will be 30s but if you increase ISO/SS the last shot will be the brightest any way just a different center. The reason back in 2010 and such PS/Lr was $800+ each and each update/upgrade and my first Canon T2i and two lenses were $850 in 2010, Yes today in PS you can just blend a moon in like the days of dark rooms. But remember to keep the moon the size of your thumb held out in front. Also no lens will get you the size moon the way you see it and also a full size full ground the way you see it due to your peripheral vision. Today doing 5 @ +/-2EV during blue hour will get you bright foreground as well as stars and if done with sun up above horizon the sun will be small and not blown out and instead of silhouettes in the foreground the dark side of things will be bright and sharp with great detail also for sunsets both times will get great color to play with. A driftwood beach is great place to test, and if you use f/22 you may capture a drawing in the sand nature drew.
Another great video, Mike! It's great to hear about techniques some people have no idea about. HDR sure have come a long way though in the early days they never looked good. Unless you did everything yourself. Stay safe and warm out there.
Thanks so much Lance!
You're right, I remember when her first came out. The photos some people produced just looked weird.
Nowadays it's very much a tool to give us a little more latitude when editing.
As always, thanks for watching my friend 😁👍
Great stuff Mike,, I find my Nikon d90 or my d300 really good bracketing burst button ,,easy peasy , most times I just use the exposure compensation dial so used to it , your videos are better than Tesco adds ,,every little helps,,, congrats great video as per I never expect anything less.
Haha!! Well thats all good then 😆
it is so easy with the exposure compensation dial isn't it!!
As always thanks for watching 😁👍
I haven't watched it yet but I already know that I'm going to like this video. Thanks Mike.
Haha!! Thanks very much Reno!! 😁👍
I find this is a must for drone footage. The small drone sensors really need the dynamic range support.
Exactly!! I have bracketing on all the time with my drone.
I also take at least 10 photos of one scene when the dynamic range is small enough for the camera to handle, and then stack them to reduce the noise.
As always thanks for watching dude! 😁👍
Thanks so much for creating this guide. It is by far, the best guide as to why and how to use the exposure bracketing that I've found on youtube.
Mike reading my mind again. One of the things I know I have to learn. Gonna check it out now. Thanks in advance 😄
Haha!! I'm actually an AI droid linked in to google ... we know what you are thinking at all times!! 😆😆
Not really ... 🤔
In all seriousness, it is well worth learning. If you go out and the conditions aren't that great, it is worth just trying it out and then blending them together when editing even if you don't need the extra dynamic range. This will show you how it works without the worry of whether or not you got the shot.
Thanks for watching 😁👍
@@mikesphotography omg please no android-mike 😂 Thanks again. Well, I have to admit, that I'm one of those that ended up with over- or underexposed shots from time to time and this is the solution/answer🙌
@@NoDoSwLa Haha!!
Well you're not alone ... I often come home and look at some of my poorly exposed shots wondering what I was thinking!! 😆
Great tutorial as always! Thank you. This inspired me to try bracketing. I have a question. Could you please make a tutorial on how to combine exposure bracketing with panorama stitching in order to get that absolute epic shot.
Thanks so much and great to hear I have inspired you to try this. It is well worth learning!
That would be a good one to do ... I'll add it to the list.
Thanks for watching 😁👍
Absolutely BRILLIANT video mate! This is going to be so useful for me. I can’t wait to go out and practice this. Thank you!
No worries Lee, great to hear it has helped!!
Thanks for watching 😁👍
So I watched this video yesterday and you inspired me to give it a go. So I was out earlier and took a load of photos using the 3 shots method. I haven't put them together in Lightroom yet, but I look forward to putting them together and seeing the results!
Great to hear Barry! I love it when I can motivate you to try different things with your camera.
I hope they come out ok.
Thanks for watching 😁👍
@@mikesphotography Thanks! I think the lighting when I took the pictures must have been fine as most of the HDRs ended up looking like the normally exposed picture, even with adjustments there was little difference for me. So I'm guessing the lighting was fine, I did notice some subtle differences on some of the HDRs. But I will be trying again in future if the lighting isn't as good.
It's still a great method, of course!🙂
The best explanations I have heard on the subject Mike. Thank you.
Thanks so much David! I hope you got something from it.
Thanks for watching 😁👍
Great rundown, now I go try it, only not in your climate! No need for Whellies
Compelling post, Mike. Covers much detail. Showing different camera brands, a plus. Same for depth of field caution. Spot-on thumbnail. I don’t follow the advice about not using auto-white balance, though. Unlike a pano, where different image segments might have different temperatures, wouldn’t the WB be expected to be constant for the scene - unless each frame is taken hours apart.
For occasional bracketing, my preference would be to use the exposure compensation dial method you showed.
No table this time, but there was a bench in background.😊 Cheers!
There was a table in there, but it was a little undercover ... at 0:16 . You're right with auto white balance, but sometimes if you're shooting long exposure times and the sun is coming in and out, this could change it a little.
I tend to switch to the bracketing function in the drive mode and then switch back, but the exposure compensation option is a great way to do it, especially with cameras like Sony and Fuji having a dedicated EC dial.
As always thanks for watching Paul 😁👍
Thanks for your video Mike! For someone who is a newbie to exposure bracketing, the way you explain how it works, I understood without any problem by first viewing. Each sentence you say is precise and to the point. I just subscribed to your channel !!
Excellent video - everything so well explained - can’t wait to get out and try this feature now
That's great to hear Mark, it is definitely a technique worth learning!!
Thanks for watching 😁👍
A really useful tutorial, I love your style and pace 👌
Thanks so much for your kind words Sue! Great to hear there is some useful info in there.
Thanks for watching 😁👍
Mike, WOW! Your explanations are amazing. Thank you. You have a new subscriber. I'm fairly new but know the basics. Your explanation of the histogram is second to none! Now I just need more practice.
Thanks so much for your kind words Matt! Great to hear I have been able to help.
Thanks for watching and thanks for subscribing, welcome to the community 😁👍
Great video. I use DXO Raw which has some great exposure editing capabilities 😊
That's great to hear!! I see dxo is getting better and better. 😁👍
i have just recently got into photography again, after viewing your landscape videos about compotition i just went ahead to my nearest reservoir and start taking pictures there, it was better than my previous shots. cant wait to try these one on my next trip as well, and if you could please do these types of videos again (esp lenses, since i have mini budget and couldnt choose beetween prime and zoom lenses).
Great to hear you're getting into photography again!! It is a lot of fun and well worth it when you get a good shot!!
Thanks for watching 😁👍
I think I picked up that you do real estate photography as well. Any chance you will do a video about that?
Haha! I used to when we lived in Dubai, but I haven't done any for a while ... basically since covid.
I would but Rich Baum has already done a load of amazing videos on that very subject: www.youtube.com/@RichBaum/videos
Check out his channel. 😁👍
Thank you. You managed to explain some details that i didn't find anywhere else.
Cheers.
Another wonderful & very helpful video Mike, i have not attempted Bracketing yet, however i will add it into my Photography learning journey. I also shot with Sony so the advice on menus was useful also
Thanks very much Shaun. It is definitely one to learn so you have it at your disposal when those highlights get really bright.
Thanks for watching 😁👍
Thank u, Mike. Would u post something on focus bracketing?
No worries, I hope it has helped.
I did a video recently on focus stacking: ruclips.net/video/1_HhjFwPUf4/видео.html
Hopefully that'll help with what you are looking for.
Thanks for watching 😁👍
@@mikesphotography Thanks!
Thanks Mike i will certainly bookmark this video full of info👍👍👍
Great to hear!!
As always thanks for watching 😁👍
I know about bracketing, but learned a lot from your video. Very straight forward. Thanks.
That's great to hear. Thanks for watching 😁👍
This video was really clear and covered everything. Great stuff
Great to hear you liked it Jim!
Thanks for watching 😁👍
This is such a good tutorial and to include what to do in Lightroom after was class. Top production quality too. Thanks
Thanks so much Kevin! 😁👍
So brilliant tutorial!
Glad you think so! 😁👍
Learned something today. Thank you Mike.
Great to hear James!
Thanks for watching 😁👍
This video just earned a subscriber! Thanks so much! I've been shooting for a couple years and knew about bracketing but didn't really understand it until now Thanks again!
That's great to hear Randy, I'm glad I have been able to help.
Thanks for watching, commenting and subscribing... and welcome to my channel! 😁👍
Exactly, I just subscribed too!
@@bhaveshssharma8826 thank you so much, and welcome to my channel! 😁👍
Superb video. Thanks for this.
You are a great teacher tho I really enjoy your explanation and method 😊
Good vlog, thanks. Nearly always bracket and mainly by hand, in continuous mode (3 shots).Most shots are at a fast enough shutter speed. Try not to use a tripod unless essential. Use either Lightroom or Aurora HDR to blend.
Thanks for letting us know how you shoot. It is a very handy function to know about.
As always thanks for watching 😁👍
Great info Mike.
Thanks Mike, good detailed one.
Thanks
No worries Rodrigo, thanks for watching 😁👍
Oh, my God, this video is soooooo good!! Thank you very much! 👏👏
Great to hear you liked it!
This was a fun one to film and edit!!
Thanks for watching 😁👍
Stained glass windows and church interiors look like a good candidate for this technique.
Most definitely! With any kind of interior shooting with windows showing the external landscapes, it works fantastically well!
Thanks for watching 😁👍
These videos are great! you explain everything very clearly. Thank you!
Thanks very much James! I think my dad being a university lecturer has helped in that department!! 😆
Thanks for watching 😁👍
Another very comprehensive video. Thank you
Thanks very much Michael!! 😁👍
I've been doing photography since 2019, I just now learned about bracketing... I thought it was a manual thing that had to be done lol i been doing it the hard way for years...
Wow, such a great video. Concise, yet so amazingly informative. What a wealth of helpful tips. Thanks!
i enjoyed every second of this guide, thank you!
Great to hear Cristian!
Thanks for watching 😁👍
So that's how it's done!! What a brilliant explanation (complete with demonstrations) of a feature I've often thought about but never tried. And you gave Fuji a mention, too... this has to be the best video ever! 😉😂. I now have my camera in front of me and playing with the bracketing settings. Cheers Mike, great work 👌🏼😊
UPDATE: just used it in the back garden and dragged the images over to Affinity Photo. Wow, that was simple! Thanks for the great tip and easy-to-follow guidance on using that setting 🥳🙌🏼
Haha! You never know, one day I might even buy a Fuji camera ... 🤔
It is such a simple way to get a bigger dynamic range from your camera ... and I have to admit, I do the lazy shooter thing of using this to get multiple exposures of the same scene a lot, so I know I will have a good exposure in there somewhere!! 😆
That's great that affinity has a blending option as well! 👍
@@mikesphotography you know I've a Fuji or two you can borrow if you think you're up for the APSC challenge 😉 🤣 And answer your website messages, I'm a potential customer! 😁👌🏼
@@findermanimages Haha!! ... sorry, today is email day!! 😁
Great video! As someone who can have difficulty staying focused at times, this video was great because you kept changing the camera angle. It may be a small thing, but it really does help!! I was just wondering if you have any recommendations for bird photography. I am new to photography and when I went out to take photos of birds I found myself spending a lot of time adjusting my exposure compensation/brackets. I think I was in the wrong mode though, I was testing out aperture and shutter priority modes, but I just learned you should be in manual with auto ISO, because low aperture and high shutter speed is critical for bird photography. It would be awesome to see a video by you on a video on bird photography since you teach so well! (Unless you already have made one.) Thanks!!
Thanks very much! great to hear I was able to keep your focus. The whole idea behind changing angles came out of me messing my lines up so much, and hating jump cuts. 😆
Bird and wildlife photography is a tricky genre to master. You do need to keep your shutter speed high, especially when you are using a really long telephoto. I haven't shot many birds, but I'd say to keep it in either shutter priority or manual with auto iso, but keep an eye on your iso levels as you shoot. Then use exposure compensation to quickly change the settings when necessary.
It is a case of going out as much as possible until you find a technique that works for you. IF you are not getting the results you want, find out about another way and then try that. It's good to have somewhere close to where you live so when you have some time, you can quickly and easily go out and shoot. I know a lot of bird photographers have a bird-table in their back garden and practice with the local wildlife until they know how to get good shots, before heading out somewhere in the wild.
I hope that helps.
Thanks for watching 😁👍
Each episode is so useful. I've written down several photography tips and couldn't wait to go out and give myself a try. By the way, what camera are you using to vlog yourself and how is your setup? Thanks again for your wonderful videos. 🙏🏼🙏🏼
Great to hear my videos are helping!
I shoot these with the Sony A7C and the Tamron 17-28mm f2.8... with the hollyland lark wireless mic and the whole setup on a small ulanzi travel tripod.
With the handheld shots, I use the gyro stabilisation to steady the shots as I don't use a gimbal, and they come out surprisingly steady considering its all handheld.
I hope that helps and Thanks for watching 😁👍
Thank you so much😊
Thank you Mike, always great stuff!!
Great video and very clear explanation. A couple of questions ; why did you opt for ISO 100 rather than 50? What is the advantage of using Multi exposure mode over lets say entire screen average. I would have thought 'entire screen average' would return more consistent results....but there is a great chance of me being mistaken on that! What do you think?
Awesome! Exactly all the info I needed. Thank you
Great to hear it was helpful.
Thanks for watching 😁👍
Your explanation got me in!! ❤
It would be highly appreciated if you could create a video detailing how to make money as a landscape photographer..Great work as always. I'm a big fan.
Thanks very much Mark!!
I'll see what I can do. 😁👍
Very helpful great advice and very well explained
Another good video Mike
Thanks very much Lyn!
I could learn a lot in here.
Great to hear!
Thanks for watching 😁👍
Thank you so much,Martin from Montreal
Thanks very much Martin from Montreal!! 😁👍
Good video, clear and very complet on information. Nothing to joke this time....😅😅😅
Ande o no ande...Burro grande!! 😆
Como siempre, gracias por ver!! 😀😀
@@mikesphotography 🥰🥰
Another great video, highly useful except I use Olympus gear and Dark table for editing!!
Olympus should have the bracketing function in there as well.
Not sure about blending in dark table though... 🤔
@@mikesphotography I found the function, seems to work okay - thanks!
Nice video Mike! My fifty cents: before taking a bracketed shot, apart from having a stable tripod and use the self-timer, one should also turn off the VR or IS of their lens. Actually, this should be off everytime one uses a tripod. Wide angle lenses won't cause much of a problem but still...
Ah yes, good point. With DSLRs and third party lenses this is vital. I did a video a while back now where I tested ibis from a tripod and it didn't seem to be as important as when I used to shoot with Canon cameras.
Thanks for watching and thanks for the tip 😁👍
Hi Mike. Do you have a plans to do a few videos in the future on occation.
Really nice guide, it reduced the noise for me
That's great to hear!! It really does help when you want to pull details out in the shadows.
Thanks for watching 😁👍
Awesome video and commentary ❤
Thanks very much... and thanks for watching 😁👍
Many thanks for sharing, bracketing is a cracking way of learning the settings and using them next time, I did pickup that your camera takes all 3 or 5 shots at the same time, I have to keep my finger on the shutter to do it. How do you get it to take all the bracketed shots for you. Have tried various ways and struggling to do this. Many thanks
No worries, great to hear it has helped.
If you shoot with Sony cameras, there is a "bracket settings" in one of the many menu options. Go to this and select the timer to 2 seconds or more, and then shoot in BKT-C setting in the drive mode, this will then set a timer and shoot them all in one go.
I don't have me camera with me at the moment, so can't remember the exact menu options, but I think that should get you there.
If you shoot with a different brand, they all should have this option and there will probably be a video on it.
Thanks for watching 😁👍
Very detailed explanation, thanks
No worries Sandeep, I hope it has helped. 😁👍
Were you in peak district? I was in Edale last week and look super familiar :D
Thanks for the tutorial! I didn't know about this feature and was doing manually and lost a good picture because I moved a bit while changing.
It looks quite Peaky doesn't it... I actually filmed this near Dolgellau in Mid Wales, on the Precipice walk. It does look a lot like Edale doesn't it!
It is well worth knowing about bracketing exactly for reasons like you mentioned. Nothing worse than having your camera move between shots.
Thanks for watching 😁👍
Brillant again Mike :)
Thanks very much Mr FC!! 😁👍
Excellent!
Thanks very much Robert!
Hi Mike, when you are merging in light room you never mentioned processing the raw photographs! Does light room do that automatically when merging?
Good video by the way
Precise on point!!!
I use Photomatix to combine my bracketed pictures.
Of course, photomatix! I haven't used that for a while.
What's it like these days?
@@mikesphotography The pro version got updated to v7 back in February of this year. I can now preview in batch processing and save the resulting image in 32bit DNG files.
I don't like the ransom based model of Adobe (subscription). I bought Photomatix v6 pro years ago and got free upgrade to v7. I am using Acdsee photo studio ultimate for digital asset management, development and editing. All perpetual license, no ransom Adobe crap.
Hi, sound of your video is very good. Why are you saying in your equipment list, that you don’t like the Lark you are using that much ?
Great video ❤
Thanks so much Suhail!
As always thanks for watching and commenting, much appreciated 😁👍
REALLy enjoyed your video! Just a quick question! what is the name of the product that you are using with at the shoulder of your bag pack to put your camera mwhile not using it ??? (at 8:09 beneath the logo of your backpack)
Thanks Great Info!!
Thank you
No worries, thank you for watching 😁👍
Thank you.
I like your wireless mic, I have one lol (Hollyland?). I like that there isn't GIANT branding letters in white to distract the viewers.
Excellent ❤️
Thanks very much 😁👍
Thanks a lot for the video! Anyway, I"d like to ask - is there anyone with Lumix (and S1 in particular) and could give some hints? S1 menu is a bit more complicated 😅
It looks like this video will help you in finding exposure bracketing: ruclips.net/video/b-dOXSFWEBk/видео.html
I hope that helps.
Thanks for watching 😁👍
Hello, this has been a great video. I'm new to photography and setup bracketing on my sony a7iii for 3 pictures 2 seconds apart. However I only see one picture , not 3 when I review the frames. Is there another setting I need to configure ? Thanks !
Are you shooting in BRK-S or BRK-C?
The 2 second delay is at the start of the sequence, and you need to be in BRK-C so it will take all three in one go.
If you are in BRK-S with the 2 second timer, you need to press the shutter for each of the three shots in the sequence.
I hope that helps. 😀👍
@@mikesphotography thanks for this info. I also watched another of your videos and was able to get this working. Your videos are well organized and easy to understand . Perfect for new photographers like me !
I usually shoot in PP10 (i.e., HLG) to capture maximum dinamic range, and color grade the photos in the post.. What do you think???
Picture profiles are more for video files where there is very little scope for editing with the lack of data in the 8bit files.
With photography, it is better to shoot in RAW as this has all the information saved by the sensor, without the need to shoot in such a flat profile.