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I'm known to like my long exposure shots of water and suchlike. The GF1 allows up to a 60 second exposure before you get into bulb mode. Not having a remote cable release yet, I was stuck with 60 secs whereas I'd usually look for 3-4 minutes. Anyway, it was just a try-out to see how the picture-taking process went.
Firstly, I had the camera on a medium gorillapod with a small Manfrotto head and quick release plate. I had the 14-45 lens on, and stopped it down to f/20 or so. Onto some step-up rings went a BW ND110 filter, then a Lee wide angle filter holder ring, then the Lee filter holder with a Lee Pro Glass 0.9ND in it (it was VERY bright!). I also set the camera to manual focus. Happily, the sensor can "see" through all these filters to compose and allow manual focus to take place, not something you can do on the 1D or any other viewfinder camera where pretty much all the light is shut out meaning you need to focus and compose before putting the filters on.
Here's the setup shot. Ignore if you can the wonky horizon - it's an iphone shot dammit.
To take the picture, in manual mode I put the aperture to f/20 and twiddled the shutter speed to 60 secs which was happily what I'd filtered the lens to achieve. I then manually focused about 1/3rd of the way into the picture and put the camera on self-timer and hit the button. Off it went, and after a minute it clicked and then did another 60 secs of what I assume is long exposure noise reduction.
A bit of tweaking in Lightroom and here's the end result.
Now the location wasn't exactly the best, but I was just after getting a feel for how this would work. With bulb mode, a better location, and less harsh direct bright sunlight I'll be very happy to leave the big SLRs at home and just have a wee bag with the GF1, a bunch of filters and a gorillapod or lightweight tripod. Result! Of course the Lee "Rangefinder" filter set might be even better, but only if you dont already have the investment in a big-boy set.
One thing though, viewing the LCD to check exposure & sharpness is quite tricky in very bright sunlight, but then I guess we all knew that anyway. Small price to pay for such a compact and competent package.
Firstly, I had the camera on a medium gorillapod with a small Manfrotto head and quick release plate. I had the 14-45 lens on, and stopped it down to f/20 or so. Onto some step-up rings went a BW ND110 filter, then a Lee wide angle filter holder ring, then the Lee filter holder with a Lee Pro Glass 0.9ND in it (it was VERY bright!). I also set the camera to manual focus. Happily, the sensor can "see" through all these filters to compose and allow manual focus to take place, not something you can do on the 1D or any other viewfinder camera where pretty much all the light is shut out meaning you need to focus and compose before putting the filters on.
Here's the setup shot. Ignore if you can the wonky horizon - it's an iphone shot dammit.
To take the picture, in manual mode I put the aperture to f/20 and twiddled the shutter speed to 60 secs which was happily what I'd filtered the lens to achieve. I then manually focused about 1/3rd of the way into the picture and put the camera on self-timer and hit the button. Off it went, and after a minute it clicked and then did another 60 secs of what I assume is long exposure noise reduction.
A bit of tweaking in Lightroom and here's the end result.
Now the location wasn't exactly the best, but I was just after getting a feel for how this would work. With bulb mode, a better location, and less harsh direct bright sunlight I'll be very happy to leave the big SLRs at home and just have a wee bag with the GF1, a bunch of filters and a gorillapod or lightweight tripod. Result! Of course the Lee "Rangefinder" filter set might be even better, but only if you dont already have the investment in a big-boy set.
One thing though, viewing the LCD to check exposure & sharpness is quite tricky in very bright sunlight, but then I guess we all knew that anyway. Small price to pay for such a compact and competent package.