A Warmer Version of That “Warm” House Photo



Nikon D4 + Nikkor 24-70mm f/2.8 @ 24mm — 2.5 sec, f/9, ISO 1000 —
map & image datanearby photos

Warmer

compared to this shot






In “Snowy Frigid Ohio
Morning
” a few days ago, I posted a photo of the back of the house that I grew up in and that my folks have lived in for 49½ years. I captioned
it “Warm”, but commented that I had hoped
for more orange spill from the incandescent lighting inside.



I hadn't gotten what I wanted because I was too late in the morning, where ambient light from the pre-dawn sky was already
bright enough to overpower the house lights.



So I tried again this morning. We had quite a bit of snow last night, and
I happened to get up early enough (and as a bonus it was much warmer than
the previous time).
The result above is more what
I was looking for.



The earlier time also benefited the result with a deeper blue light filtering in through the clouds, providing more contrast to
the orange of the incandescent lights.



This same technique applies to photographing buildings or Christmas lights (or cherry-blossom lightups or campfires or airplanes,
etc.) in the morning or evening... photos taken at dawn or dusk can be much more compelling than those taken when the sky is
completely dark or bright.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 16, 2016 20:34
No comments have been added yet.


Jeffrey E.F. Friedl's Blog

Jeffrey E.F. Friedl
Jeffrey E.F. Friedl isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.
Follow Jeffrey E.F. Friedl's blog with rss.