Saturday 3 August 2019

weather - How can I take advantage of fog in my photographs?



Ir's been quite foggy here for the last few days. The quality of light is different. Colour saturation is fairly low. Near the edge of the fog bank the sun looks great, as if there is a huge ND filter in front of it. Anyway, this weekend promises more fog. Are ther any particular tips to get great shots taking advantage of fog?



Answer



There are MANY links below...hover over each one to identify where they start and end, and view each example. ;)


For nature:


Position your camera behind a lone tree or under a forest canopy, and let the filtered sunlight (or moonlight) create rays of light in the fog. Capture trees fading into the fog. Find a lake shore or some islands out on the water, and capture the islands or far shore appearing out of the mist. Elevate yourself above the fog, and shoot down into it.


For City:


Capture a bridge fading into the mist at night. Frame a bridge head on, and look into nothing. Photograph a building rising into nothing. Capture city spotlights beaming into space.


Tips:


Use ETTR (see also, What is ETTR (Expose To The Right)?), but moderately, and don't worry about the low contrast (your histogram should have a peak near the right end, but not entirely there, and cover only a portion of your total dynamic range.) Fog will certainly reduce the dynamic range of most scenes, and can create very moody photos. Fog is a GREAT tool for night photography, as it enhances the illumination provided by street lamps, buildings, etc. Fog is also an excellent way to frame silhouettes of pretty much anything, especially if you put the light source directly behind the silhouetted subject...then you also get kind of a halo of light shafts.


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