Shooting Fireworks: The Best Cameras for the Job
Equipped with these tips--and one of these cameras--you can take stunning photos of holiday fireworks.
Summertime evokes timeless images of fire hydrants spraying water into the air, ice cream trucks rumbling down neighborhood streets...and Fourth of July fireworks illuminating the night sky. This year, you can capture a slice of summer forever with your digital camera by photographing a fireworks display.
It's not hard to do: Equipped with a few photo tips and the right camera, you can take amazing fireworks of your own.
The secret behind capturing fireworks: Use a slow shutter speed, so you can record those dramatic, colorful light trails as they explode through the sky. That also means you'll need some sort of camera support to
The best way to stabilize your camera is with a tripod, where it can sit motionless through a long exposure. In a pinch, though, you can always try to brace yourself against a tree or a building, or hold the camera atop a monopod or walking stick.
If you have a digital SLR,
If your point-and-shoot or advanced point-and-shoot camera has a fireworks mode, go ahead and enable it--it will automatically adjust the camera's various settings for long-exposure night photography.
For the most part, I find that the preset fireworks mode achieves good results--it turns the flash to off, sets autofocus to infinity and
Advanced photographers are better off going with long manual exposures for more creative control.
Some point-and-shoots may lack a fireworks-specific mode, but may still allow you to manually adjust the settings. (Most digital SLRs lack a preset fireworks mode entirely.) In those cases, set the camera to its lowest ISO setting, which will minimize the camera's tendency to generate distracting digital noise during the long exposure.
You should also turn off automatic focus and set the camera's focus to infinity, so it doesn't search helplessly for a subject in the dark when you're trying to start the exposure. No manual focus control? Try using the camera's landscape mode, which also sets the focus to infinity; the low-light environment will encourage the camera to shoot at a slow shutter speed by default.
If you can control the aperture setting on your point-and-shoot, dial in a low f/stop, somewhere between f/8 and f/16. That will help prevent overexposing the scene during the long exposure and avoid light "blooms" coming from the explosions in the sky.
And finally, choose a slow shutter speed--anywhere between 1 second and 16 seconds can work, depending upon the amount of ambient light and how many fireworks are in the sky. The longer your exposure, the more fireworks you'll capture at once, and the longer your light trails will be. So you might want to start with a shutter speed around 1 to 4 seconds and see if you like the results. For really long exposures, try covering the lens with your hand or the lens cap between bursts to avoid over-exposing the picture.
Digital SLR users have
As the preceding page indicates, you can use almost any digital camera to capture fireworks, as long as it
Among your top choices for point-and-shoot models appropriate for fireworks shooting: the Panasonic Lumix DMC-LX2. Currently ranked second on PC World's Top 10 Point-and-Shoot Cameras and available for around $400, this 10-megapixel camera uniquely captures pictures in a variety of aspect ratios, such as 3:2 (DVD), 16:9 (HDTV), and 4:3 (traditional). It also has a fireworks mode among its 18 scene modes, as well as aperture-priority, shutter-priority, and full-manual shooting modes.
Nikon's Coolpix L10 clocks in with half as many megapixels as the Lumix DMC-LX2, but at
The Fujifilm Finepix A610, another inexpensive, entry-level camera--with 6.3 megapixels--lacks advanced modes and manual exposure. But its 14 scene modes--including a fireworks mode--do a reasonable job of adjusting exposures for you.
Any of the advanced point-and shoot cameras on our Top 5 chart would be suitable for fireworks. Advanced cameras are generally
If you want more control than what you can get from a point-and-shoot camera--including the ability to change lenses--any digital SLR is more than up to the task of photographing fireworks. The new, 12.2-megapixel Canon EOS Digital Rebel XSi, a relatively
The more-expensive, 10-megapixel Canon EOS 40D boasts amazing image quality (it received a score of Superior in the PC World Test Center's
Another favorite is the 10-megapixel Olympus Evolt-E510. Not only does this camera include a complete range of traditional SLR exposure controls, but one of its 19 scene modes is a fireworks setting.
Finally, one more digital SLR that's a strong
Dave Johnson, PC World
