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Hello all,
I'm afraid I'm back, and I'm afraid I'm asking more stupid questions.
Fans will know that I do quite a lot of deliberate photoshop and post-processing work to get graphic novel-like effects to my photographs, and more often than not I will chuck on some rain to add to the atmosphere.
Now I'm growing up a bit, however, I'm starting to think seriously (Srsly? Srsly.) about photographing rain, and figured that it's actually quite hard - I want the tracers you see in the graphic novels, but for real.
I live in Mordor, and am never short of moody urban scenes to shoot, but I'd like to capture actual rain falling, which is blummin hard - what with it being blumming small and fast.
For daytime shooting I figured whacking on a heavy ND filter and upping the exposure would get me the effects I want, but then realised that no two raindrops fall in the same place at the same time.
Anyone got any advice or examples of what I should do to get this effect?
Many thanks,
Myky D
I'm afraid I'm back, and I'm afraid I'm asking more stupid questions.
Fans will know that I do quite a lot of deliberate photoshop and post-processing work to get graphic novel-like effects to my photographs, and more often than not I will chuck on some rain to add to the atmosphere.
Now I'm growing up a bit, however, I'm starting to think seriously (Srsly? Srsly.) about photographing rain, and figured that it's actually quite hard - I want the tracers you see in the graphic novels, but for real.
I live in Mordor, and am never short of moody urban scenes to shoot, but I'd like to capture actual rain falling, which is blummin hard - what with it being blumming small and fast.
For daytime shooting I figured whacking on a heavy ND filter and upping the exposure would get me the effects I want, but then realised that no two raindrops fall in the same place at the same time.
Anyone got any advice or examples of what I should do to get this effect?
Many thanks,
Myky D