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RF
>>205582
(for all your night photos)
1. Choose an aperture of around 5 or 5.6 (this will keep most things in focus while letting in a reasonable amount of light) and expose your shots for 2 seconds or more. Maybe up to 8 or 15 in some shots.
2. Use a tripod! Or set the camera on top of a car or something, and set the self-timer to avoid camera shake.
3. Experiment shooting scenes that have very little light in long exposure times. (there does not necessarily need to be a street light in the scene)
4. Adjust levels and saturation in post-processing, but be careful about the amount of noise that may be reviled.
Please post more after following these suggestions.
BTW, In night shots, a full moon will always be blown out, unless you combine the image from another exposure, or wait a very long time until the next lunar eclipse. Sometimes a crescent moon will show detail in the rest of the moon's surface, where it will expose correctly.
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