Photography
Techniques and settings for night photography.
Art doesn’t stop after the sun goes down. Discover tips, tricks, and the right settings to take stunning photos after dark.
Shine bright in the world of night photography.
Learn to:
- Open your aperture to let in natural light
- Use a high (but not too high) ISO to expose images properly
- Add a flash or fill light when shooting subjects in the dark
- Try a tripod to stay in focus and stay away from the shakes
- Make night photography not just an art but also an adventure.
The sun goes down, the stars come out, city lights flicker on, and how you use your camera changes.
Because night photography requires extra attention to light and motion, you may want a tripod, a special lens, or a camera capable of increasing ISO without degrading image quality. There’s definitely a lot to consider — but there’s also a lot to play with. Sometimes the right constraints give you freedom to discover the most interesting images. Read on for night photography tips that can help you make the most of shooting in the dark.
Select your night photography settings.
Shooting at night means low light. Whether you’re capturing the stars or the lights of the city, you’ll need to make sure there’s enough light on the subject for your camera to register that something’s there.
Nighttime photography settings are a good place to begin: opening up your aperture, slowing down your shutter speed, or (controversially) fiddling with your ISO (the sensitivity of your digital camera — comparable to film speed in a film camera). But you can also look for ways to adjust the light on your subject. That could mean adding a flash or a fill light or just asking your subject to step forward into the glow of a streetlamp.
Each of these has its own set of constraints, requiring either good planning or a little luck (if you want that tree branch to move out of your light, you’ll need a length of rope or a very steady wind). You’ll never get the control afforded by daytime photography settings, so when you’re aiming to take great night shots, be sure to give yourself time to experiment.
Anthony Pidgeon, a veteran of low-light and nighttime shoots, suggests starting with a few test shots to establish the optimal shutter speed and find the right white balance: “Because it’s dark, the image will take longer to register on the sensor or the film. That means your shutter speed has to be slower just to get the shot.
“You need to get a baseline exposure that shows you what you’re getting with the ambient light,” Pigeon says. “Then find out how far you can go without blowing out the highlights. ‘This cool neon sign — if I overexpose it, it will go out to white instead of this cool red or green.’ You work with that until you get your baseline.”
Find your light.
Alex Tan, a photographer and art director, says that night photography is the best environment to work in because, unlike with daytime shoots, the light’s “not changing — it’s very much the same throughout the night. And so you have a lot of room to experiment; you can keep trying things until you feel like you got it right without worrying about the light changing. During the day, when you’re outside, the sun is constantly changing.”
“You can keep trying things until you feel like you got it right without worrying about the light changing.”
That consistency gives you time to play — even though you’ll need slow shutter speeds and a wide aperture — you’ll have an evenly lit backdrop where you can experiment.
Pidgeon recommends a few different ways to explore light in nighttime street photography. He notes that “a lot of times you want to use light to define the shape of things or the scale of things. So if you’ve got light on one part of the building, and it just bleeds off so you can’t tell where the building ends and the night sky begins, that doesn’t look so great.”
Pidgeon thinks photographers should “find a way to pop in a little something on the corner of that building, so that you’re defining the edge. That can be enough to create interest. Sometimes it can be as simple as waiting for a car to go by and shine its headlights for a second; that just gives you that little edge. It’s a different frame of mind because you really have to think about the composition. You have to add things in, because you have less to work with.”
Keep it sharp.
With longer exposure and a wider aperture, sharp focus on your subject can be tricky. To avoid blur, Tan notes “You might have to be a little bit more steady if you’re opening up on your aperture or slowing your shutter speed. Shooting at night is a little bit slower of a game.”
He warns that “a lot of people miss focus at night; their subjects aren’t sharp. When they open up to a really wide depth of field, there’s not a lot of forgiveness on sharpness. If your subject moves an inch or two away from the camera, they all of a sudden go out of the range of focus.” Setting your shot up carefully and asking your human subjects to be still can help ensure that your image is clear.
Samuel Nute, a landscape photographer, has tips on night sky photography — sometimes called astrophotography— which requires very long exposures and especially careful attention to focus. His recommendation:
“You want to have the shutter open for anywhere from 10 seconds to a minute, depending on what you’re trying to get. But in that time, if the camera moves at all, the shot’s going to be blurry.”
Using a cable to control the shutter remotely — so you don’t have to touch the camera — is really, really important. Having a tripod is important, as well. Because, again, you need to limit movement.”
If it’s a windy night or you’re trying to capture star trails, Nute suggests using what you have on hand to minimize camera shake: “You can set up your tripod and then hang your backpack so that the tripod won’t move in the wind, acting like a sandbag of sorts.”
Embrace preparation, patience, and a sense of adventure.
Taking photos at night requires a little extra precision around camera settings and a bit more preparation than simple daytime snapshots. But the rewards can be great, and the nighttime scenes you discover through your lens may surprise you.
Pidgeon offers a last piece of advice for those setting off into the dark, suggesting that the real work is about “looking at it as an adventure — at what makes a compelling or interesting picture versus being more control oriented. You need a certain amount of control to come up with something that technically works, but with night photography, you embrace the random things that happen. You can come up with some cool shots if you’re in that mindset.”