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General Photography
Stop the Drips
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<blockquote data-quote="naja" data-source="post: 10978" data-attributes="member: 3478"><p>All the above is great advice. I like to freeze water drops at times and as suggested above I use a fast shutter speed and a fairly large aperture. I use flash and bounce the light from something behind the drops to get them back lit, and I set the white balance to Shady rather than Flash, to get more blue into the drops.</p><p></p><p>If you do this each year why not practice between winter by using drip from a tap as you can control the rate of those?</p><p></p><p>Good luck, it is fun to try things a bit challenging</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="naja, post: 10978, member: 3478"] All the above is great advice. I like to freeze water drops at times and as suggested above I use a fast shutter speed and a fairly large aperture. I use flash and bounce the light from something behind the drops to get them back lit, and I set the white balance to Shady rather than Flash, to get more blue into the drops. If you do this each year why not practice between winter by using drip from a tap as you can control the rate of those? Good luck, it is fun to try things a bit challenging [/QUOTE]
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