Two more things to consider: first, if you use tiny apertures, diffraction is going to kill your sharpness. See here for details, replace grain size for pixel size to make it applicable to film photography. To make a long story short: you can't have infinite DOF and sharpness at the same time.Reason I want mirror lockup is because the shot I want would be at night, with passing figures and traffic but also with fixed structures like roads/buildings which need to be as sharp as humanly possible, with as big a depth of field as poss. So I want to try to get the smallest ap I can. Figured that my issues in the past of doing the f32+ apertures during the day, and not using MLU, and getting the perfect shot *apart from the bloody camera tremor* meant it was necessary to use MLU at any time of day or night.
To make a long story short: you can't have infinite DOF and sharpness at the same time.
So:
I will give this all a test run on polaroid soon, but is the general consensus here that there's no
point in using MLU, and I may as well just press the shutter button with a black thing over lens,
then drop it away, and put it back over just before I switch T-N at the end?
All I want is like....an insane amount of sharpness in the final image. Given that it's at night,
and there will be fixed points of light in it, if I follow those steps the shake will be so minimal as not to
matter?
Thanks for all the technical support guys
I'll give it all a whirl.
I will give this all a test run on polaroid soon, but is the general consensus here that there's no point in using MLU, and I may as well just press the shutter button with a black thing over lens, then drop it away, and put it back over just before I switch T-N at the end?
All I want is like....an insane amount of sharpness in the final image. Given that it's at night, and there will be fixed points of light in it, if I follow those steps the shake will be so minimal as not to matter?
Hmm, going to be shooting in colour though...any suggestions for suitable film in colour? I'm thinking ofFor what you want, I would use Fuji Neopan 100 Acros or Kodak T-Max 100. Not only are they sharp as all get out, but they are very easy with which to figure long exposures, due to their excellent maintenance of reciprocity.
So just point and fire you think? And make sure I bolt the tripod down pretty good?That will work fine but even that is not essential for the ten minute exposure as you mentioned in your original post.
For exposures like this, I would be more worried about the sturdiness of the tripod and and road induced vibration causing movement than looking to the mirror for the problem.
I'm just thinking that that big old mirror will go clunk and kill the shot
I don't have a fabulously new and sturdy tripod so you're right, if anything
is going to make the image sharper it's the tripod situation. I will take sandbags.
I'm hoping to shoot at a time when there is not a lot of traffic or vibration around, if it's not too
cold, so that might not be a big problem.
Hmm, going to be shooting in colour though...any suggestions for suitable film in colour? I'm thinking of
a tungsten slide of some sort, but usually use Fuji 160C.
I am slightly lazy when it comes to figuring out reciprocity and things like that..is this something I'd need
to be hyper aware of with long night exposures?
If you can get a hold of some Kodak Portra 100T or Fuji NPL (both color negative films), I'd try that. If not, Fuji T64 or Kodak 64T (both transparency films).
All four of these films are discontinued; the two transparency ones more recently.
IME, the things to be most aware of in night exposures are high contrast compositions and reciprocity failure of your film. Many night shots are very high in contrast (with lamps or windows in the picture being much, much brighter than the things they are illuminating), and you have to be careful with exposure. The four films I mentioned help with both reciprocity and color balance.
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