The Ghost train and other wonders of long endurance
The magic of long exposure perfectly helps to convey the power of movement. The shutter speed is a very useful tool. Having learned how to work with it, you can get amazing pictures. Experience shows that long-exposure scenes are more interesting and attractive to the viewer.
This is what fireworks look like with a long exposure.
The Milky Way looks like fancy geometric fractals on a long exposure.
A trace in the sky that was left by a plane taking off.
Bright lights of amusement rides in the amusement park.
Helicopter landing.
A tram in Budapest, on which 50 thousand LED light bulbs were installed.
A passenger train rushes against the background of the Canadian Mountains.
The flight of midges under a street lamp on a long exposure.
The glow of the traffic light at a long shutter speed.
To make this frame, the author set the aperture shutter speed for 3 minutes. Not a single firefly in this jar was injured when creating the photo.
The backlight on the keyboard, taken with a change in the focal length during the exposure, with a zoom jerk.
A picture taken at a 10-minute exposure: a flickering flashlight was attached to the robot vacuum cleaner while it was cleaning the living room.
The flight of fireflies in the Japanese forest.
Smooth running of the escalator at a speed of several minutes.
A Ferris wheel on a long exposure looks like a stained glass window.
The flight of a snowboarder at a long shutter speed, LEDs are attached to the board.
A procession of believers with lighted candles in Salisbury Cathedral.
Another robot vacuum cleaner, which has an LED that changes color.
Mountain highway on a long exposure.
Fireworks taking off.
At a long exposure, the lava in the lamp looks like a distant galaxy enclosed in a vessel.
This is what a bright crowd of marathon runners looks like, filmed on a long shutter speed.
Glow-in-the-dark sticks were thrown into the waterfall.
Keywords: Movement | Photo school | Long exposure