Which camera is best for hours of darkness shots?

i'd like to buy casio exilim z1050 but i dunno just about taking night shots if this camera isnt biddable tell me what are ur suggestions beneath $250?


Answers:    The Z1050 looks like a clothed point and shoot camera, but it's probably not the best camera for night shots. You'll hold some difficulty finding any digital camera for under $250.00 i.e.. The problem is than most digital cameras in that price scope are designed for folks who take fundamentally snapshots. You can use them for more complex shooting situation, but it's a challenge.

It looks close to the Z1050 does have a darkness shooting mode which will adjust the the shutter speed from 4 to 1/1000 seconds. Most darkness shooting situation will call for a shutter speed of more than 4 second. In any case, you will requirement a tripod and you will have to use the self-timer, although you should singular need to set it to the 2 second setting.

The other infer you might want to try is to set your ISO sensitivity to 800 and your Exposure Compensation to EV+2. This will overexposre your night shots, which isn't a desperate thing to do.

If you approaching the look and feel of the Z1050, afterwards by all manner go ahead and return with it. I think you'll find that unless you want to specialize within night photography, you really won't be using the Z1050 for that much dark work.

On the other hand, if you truly want to work at hours of darkness, then you call for to consider a more sophisticated system entirely. You should look into getting a digital SLR that offers you full brochure control. The problem is that you're also looking at a bit more than $250.00.

The other possible solution is to look at going with a picture camera. Film is actually a much better choice if you want to cart timed night exposures. For that same $250.00 you can find a good used SLR and a couple of lenses.

Hope this help.

Good luck and good shooting.
Infrared Photography near Sony’s Night-shot mode.
VISIT:
http://www.camera-news.com/2004/10/30/in...
You need a camera that :

1) Allows full instruction book control

2) Can be mounted on a tripod

3) Either has a 15 second setting on the shutter speed or have "T" or "B" settings

4) Allows use of a mechanical cable release*

Using my ever-present FotoSharp (fotosharp.com) 'Day & Night Exposure Guide' we'll look at Scene 14, "City skyline contained by distance". Mount your camera on your tripod, compose, and with the shutter at any "T" or "B" use these settings:

At ISO 100

f2.8 @ 4 seconds
f4 @ 8 second
f5.6 @ 15 seconds
f8 @ 30 second.

Since we are using a tripod and cable release we really don't need a difficult ISO. Also, lenses tend to give their best results at between f5.6 and f11 so a "fast" lens isn't really needed.

What give or take a few outdoor sports? Scene # 7

At ISO 400

f2.8 @ 1/125 sec.
f4 @ 1/60 sec.
f5.6 @ 1/15 sec.

At ISO 800

f2.8 @ 1/250 sec.
f4 @ 1/125 sec.
f5.6 @ 1/60 sec.

At ISO 1600

f2.8 @ 1/500 sec.
f4 @ 1/250 sec.
f5.6 @ 1/125 sec.

As you can readily see night/low-light photography requires a camera with the sophistication of using instruction manual controls, a tripod and a cable release and being efficient of higher ISO settings. Unless you basically want to use flash.

* If your camera has a 15 second exposure speed you can do short the cable release and use the camera's self-timer.

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