no.... just absolutely no... that's not how exposure works at all buddy... exposure doesn't change based off of the medium size.... the depth of field would roughtly (not really) scale with the sensor size... the exposure doesn't.... f4, 1/500th sec at ISO400 will give you the exact same exposure on a phone sensor as on 4x5... jesus@@houghwhite411
@@houghwhite411 to be very honest, their has certainly been a lot of improvement in the low light iso performance of apsc cameras. Like APSC color images are pretty usable till 6400 these days, back when I started photography using nikon d5100, one cannot fathom going past 1600 and the low light pictures looked terrible. That's 2 stops of improvement over a span of more then a decade. I remember using the 35mm 1.8 back in the day and the 23mm f2 i use today is leaps and bound better in low light due to the greater iso control.
I love that expression "Honeymoon Phase"... lol.. but never hold back. You're an amazing photographer, way above average! Are New Yorkers your main audience? I'm a random guy in a small town in Canada, and I've been following your channel for years. You inspire me, and for sure countless others. Never apologize. Go for it! You're a true artist. There's no such thing as cliche, except to intellectuals.
Faizal, f/2.8 is a fast lens. That’s why it the constant max for the fastest zooms. The f/2 on the X100V is super-fast. Let’s see what you can do at f/4
@@djstuc No it isn't. Crop sensors are objectively worse in low light compared to full frame at the same f-stop. Full frame aren't better because they have better f-stop (they don't) - they're better because they have bigger sensors with `photosites (pixels) that usually gather more photons each - resulting in less variance that causes ISO fuzz. I still prefer crop sensor (I'm on an X-T5) because I think the trade-off is worth the lighter camera. But for low light, full frame has an advantage. To clarify - both sensors record the same intensity. But full frame grabs more photons. If you took my X-T5 and doubled its size, it'd grab twice as many photos per pixel and get better ISO (and I think dynamic range) as a result.
@@djstuc And then the crop sensor 'crops' out a lot of the light that's gathered. Hence why so many professional, high-end photographers out there explained the low-light benefits of full frame. There's a reason why astronomers like bigger sensors, not just bigger lenses.
@@djstuc I don't know what you are on about. The only thing I commented on is the incorrect... click-bait - title. It says you don't need a fast lens and then Faizel sets out with only fast lenses to demonstrate. To square with his title he should be showing us how to shoot with a kit-lens zoom with a max aperture of f/3.5. It would be tricky. But just about feasible. I would not take it on, though. I think you DO need a fast lens for night time shooting... f/2.8 or faster. I did a two-year project of night time street photography with a f/1.4 lens. Some years later I did another night time project (and made it into a couple of books) with a Fuji f/2 lens. Improvements in sensors meant it was much easier shooting with the f/2. ISO1600 and 3200 showed no appreciable noise in the books I had printed.
in my experience, you can go with 2.0 and slower for a really low light night photos if you have both or one of those: - camera that handles high iso really good, like 6k or smth - you have some kind of stabilisation, either build in or a gimble or just a stand, that will allow you to slow down your shutter without making shaky photos My X-T1 got none of those, so 1.4 is the answer. 2.0 also works, just not that great also that heavily depends on the city, New York, Bangkok, Tokyo and all that have enormous amounts of night lights, go to Berlin and you would be suffering
Great video Faizal, F2 is super perfect for night shooting, great photos, Love the pix you took of the empty diner in China Town, very eerie! you have such a great eye!!!
When I shoot at night I usually use an f/2 or f/1.8 lens, any faster isn’t really needed. But I did a (short albeit) night shoot with an f/4 zoom lens at one point and it worked perfectly fine on my canon R6 mk2 at iso 6400.
Night photography is a lot of fun and can get very moody. It brings out another dimension most of us don't pay much attention to. I'm sure the non-photographers consider noght to be an inconvenience. Those of us that enjoy it understand the moodiness and beauty that can be found at night. Darkness is particularly good for capturing liminal images. Cheers to you Faizal for showing just how interesting night pics can be.
My first experiences with night time street photography was when I was moving across the US. I drove to see a friend in Chicago and walked around with them and my zeiss 135mm 2.8 shooting around 1/60 and ISO 3200-5000 It was a wonderful experience. Two days later I was in NYC with another friend shooting with that same setup. Some of the best photos I've taken to date were on those two days. A year or so later I walked around Boston at night with a 500c loaded with delta 3200 and night-time street photography is one of my favorite things to do.
I was about to save up for the 56 1.2 WR. I already have the 23 1.4 wr - and think it’s a bit big! This 50 f2 is super tempting also for its size. Thank you for making me less skeptical for the main weakness I assumed the lens would have.
I recently bought a pocket tripod that extends to just over 3ft and for my night photography it's been a game changer. Certainly breathes new life into my slower lenses. It's the kind of tripod to make most photographers wince (myself included) but the fact it can go in your back pocket and be ready to use within 3 seconds makes it an essential part of my kit going forward. Typically, tripods (even the regular travel tripods) make you stand out plus they need to be carried in a separate bag but with this thing it's a no brainer. More night photography guys should definitely consider using one. Though, good luck trying to find one. The only one I could find that was small enough for a trouser pocket but extendable to 3.5ft was by Hama. As far as I can tell, nothing else like it exists. Wouldn't dream of using it with my D810 though. Strictly a Fuji X100 and Sony RX1 tripod.
@@julesc5571 No, the light gathering capability doesn't change regardless of the sensor size. It is still f/2. What changes is the depth of field, which would make an f/2 lens have f/3 full-frame equivalent DOF.
Awesome video again man! Love seeing your mindset and your pics. If you posted an unedited vid of a shooting session I’d watch the whole thing, it’s so relaxing!
Just got a backpack clip for my Osmo Pocket 3, kinda nice cause you can also have the pocket be "horizontal as well. I haven't tried making a "photo walk" video yet - but imagine it might work well for you!
Those filters look cool! I have a couple of Urth lens adapters and I'm really happy with them. For winter photography I got a cheap pair of cycling gloves on Amazon from a brand called Ozero that are thin enough that I can mostly still control my camera, they have a little conductive fabric on the index finger for touch screen use, and they're waterproof. They definitely make winter photography more bearable!
Love a lot of the shots you took in this video, I highly recommend going back to Chinatown on a night when there is light snow/rain you'll get some really cool cyberpunk looking shots
You got some wonderful shots on that photo walk. I really appreciate you sharing those filters, I was not familiar with them. I need to check them out. I love the affect they had on your images.
I have some F1.4 even F0.95 lenses, but they are quite dim wide open, so it's rare that I can take nice and sharp photos at that aperture. I also prefer to use them F2 and up. Also keep in mind that Fujifilm focuses on the nose instead of the eyes lol :D so if you take a head shot @1.4, the eyes are already gonna be blur. I would like to add tho, that F2, F2.8 are still fast lenses. What you're trying to show on this video should make sense if you shoot F4 or F5.6. Those are apertures of cheap kit lenses.
@@ichheissedamian of course it has, that's what I'm talking about. It locks on the eye, but when you zoom in on your computer, it won't be the eyes that's sharp... misfocuses, so it's normally the face or the top of the nasal bone that's sharp, but not the iris
F2 is totally fine if the scene is well lit. However, try the same thing on the city outskirts and without f1.4 or greater, high ISO or tripod, or at least good IBIS or OIS, you might have a problem...
Great work Faizal, as always. Also, congratulations on your move to NY. You deserve every success. It's been great watching the channel grow. Keep going, don't give up and all 223k of us will continue to watch. Have an epic 2024.
Absolutely amazing pictures and a great idea for such a walk. The night city is most inspiring for me. But I guess it would be a bit scary to walk alone at night. 😅
Great pics, as always, I need to get some nighy street photography in my portfolio. For the POV camera, there isn't an elegant solution for the Osmo Pocket, so might be best to just use if when talking to camera (looks good in low light btw), then use GoPro/Osmo Action for POV. You could use the Insta360 Go 3 for both, as you could mount that quickly to your chest, then pop into the action pod for vlogging. But it won't be as good in low light as it's a smaller sensor and doesn't fo 4k. Maybe the go 4 will do. Keep up the great videos and photos!
Great shots and inspiring video as always. You make the process seem so effortless. How do you go about making sure things are in focus? In the video it just looked like you were shooting from the hip one handed but still get crisp subjects.
Thanks for taking the time to reply. So are you getting your subject in the bright light then focussing with half shutter press then recomposing? It’s the way you’re doing it so effortlessly and one handed that made me curious. Again really great content and thanks for the reply.
Great video! I also believe that photographers use a faster lens to shoot at night without having to increase their ISO. Resulting a noisy image which some people don't like. But who cares.
I mean, try shooting all that without ibis, which the XT5 has and is pretty solid for still. I had an XT2, great camera even in 2024, but unless you crank up the ISO, you better have surgeon still hands or a tripod.
Great video. Thank you. Really good capture of NY at "night". But just FYI -- I consider an f2 as a fast lens. Wherein, I would consider something like a f3.5-5.6 to be a slow lens. And anything less, like an f1.2 or f0.8 to be "God-like" fast apertures. So f2? It's a fast lens in my book. Either way, great use of mist filters. Cool images. And I really liked it's use on the video, too.
Cinematography, especially the music, was awesome this video. I kinda just zoned out, it was great. Hope to find the essence of this video in future content also!!
Wow! What an incredible video! The music and atmosphere are absolutely mesmerizing. I'm curious, could you share the photometry and exposure dial settings you used?
Hello Faizal, i’ve been watching all your video those past month. And sometimes I caught myself having feeling of a spider sens tanglling for candid photography. Those past months i was deeging a lot in camera gear and really liked the fuji_xE4 for is spec and esthetics. But i realized that in your last videos you are haven.t used it. Have you sell it ? Have you been bother by anything ? would love to know why if you can share more details here or in dm. Thank you a lot for your content it is very relaxing and educative cheers from france 🎉
Hey, just wondering if you plan on keeping the lumix after this "trying out" period ends? Would appreciate some extended thoughts now that you've had it for awhile
Ethereal vibes, very cool results. It seems like you are using the electronic shutter in this video, do you not see any banding issues with the artificial lighting?
F2 is pretty fast regardless crop of full frame sensor. You gain at least 1-stop compared to your zoom lens which can be really helpful in night photography. 1/15 > 1/30s SS without IS.
dude you're going out in the brightest parts of New York with an f2 lens and then make a video about the fact that "You Don't Need a Fast Lens for Night Photography"
last time i was in nyc my sleep schedule was messed up so i spent 9 nights straight just walking around shooting. i got like 150 instagram posts out of like 4000+ shots. bad timing though because it was right when stills died out on instagram
Hey Faizal, great video as always. Love the music. The Blackmist filters are great too. You mentioned that you were testing the Osmo Pocket 3 for low light use. What did you think?
Phew now i fell better about ordering the 23mm f2, i wanted to get the 35mm 1.4 but then i mostly shoot street and 50mm ff equivalent is a bit tight. Was worried about missing in that 1 stop of light and dof but i feel easy after reading the comments. I got thr xpro3 so no ibis for me but i think i would be carrying a tripod with me on night photowalks. Thought about getting that old 23mm 1.4 but that lens is huge and ruins the reason of getting the xpro in the first place. Can someone also share their experience with using manual focus in night time street photograohy with fuji ? I am tempted on getting them but i am worried about on lack of manual focussing skills.
I was about to say the same, plenty of light in a city. What I call low light is clearly not what he calls it! I simply could not use a lens at f/2 for my night time shots.
Were you using Mechanical or Electronic Shutter? I often wonder this when there are a lot of subjects that might react to the sound and sight of a camera. I suspect the shutter noise was simply lost to the street, but I am curious.
This guy: FranceWheeler - rides a powered wheel through Paris. He shoots video with what looks like an Osmo Pocket 3 mounted up above his shoulder on some kind of harness/rig. He doesn't say what gear he uses but I noticed a shadow in one of his two most recent videos. Very smooth imagery - video POV higher than a bicycle and just above car roofs.
Shooting in burts will help you with motion blur due to camera shake when you press the shutter button. Once you hold the shutter down, the camera will have stabilised by the time the 3rd photo is taken. I learnt this from one of Roman Fox's videos. Really helps with using low shutter speed at night.
Oh yeah, that is in NY with the newest camera with crazy high iso ;-) right one does not need. Lets repeat that statement with f4.5 and max non-mushy iso of 800 otside of the biggest megapolis in the world wo long exposure
I was shooting few days ago in a snow area in one nice Moscow park. There were no food nearby, very few ppl. I was happy that I've put a worm porridge (in a wide thermos jug) in my backpack. Thus I've got some energy before the dark. So after that I've continued to shoot in the beautiful "light gallery". There is a place where a lot of stylized lamps are installed. It's practically in a wood (narrow area almost near water canal). LEDs changes colors so I was tooking different photographs standing in the places where I was thinking that I get some really nice shots. It was about -10 - -15C! :) So it's not NY's temperatures I guess. Take a warm case for your camera and you'll not get your hands frozen!
F2 is really fast lens. I like the cyberpunk ambience on some pictures and the music selection collaborate with this
it's apsc, really fast would be f1.4 and super fast would be 0.95
But in my experience, f2 is workable as long as there are artificial lights nearby
no.... just absolutely no... that's not how exposure works at all buddy... exposure doesn't change based off of the medium size.... the depth of field would roughtly (not really) scale with the sensor size... the exposure doesn't.... f4, 1/500th sec at ISO400 will give you the exact same exposure on a phone sensor as on 4x5... jesus@@houghwhite411
@@houghwhite411 to be very honest, their has certainly been a lot of improvement in the low light iso performance of apsc cameras. Like APSC color images are pretty usable till 6400 these days, back when I started photography using nikon d5100, one cannot fathom going past 1600 and the low light pictures looked terrible. That's 2 stops of improvement over a span of more then a decade. I remember using the 35mm 1.8 back in the day and the 23mm f2 i use today is leaps and bound better in low light due to the greater iso control.
@@houghwhite411 a smaller sensor does not affect the amount of light gathered by the aperture, it only affects the depth of field as far as I know.
@@otisjordan5613 Correct, but apsc sensors collect less light in general because theyre smaller in size.
I love that expression "Honeymoon Phase"... lol.. but never hold back. You're an amazing photographer, way above average! Are New Yorkers your main audience? I'm a random guy in a small town in Canada, and I've been following your channel for years. You inspire me, and for sure countless others. Never apologize. Go for it! You're a true artist. There's no such thing as cliche, except to intellectuals.
Really appreciate your kind words
A large number of TH-cam photographers are Canadian, funny enough.
Faizal, f/2.8 is a fast lens. That’s why it the constant max for the fastest zooms. The f/2 on the X100V is super-fast.
Let’s see what you can do at f/4
F2 is most definitely not a "super fast lens" on a crop sensor camera.
@@djstuc No it isn't. Crop sensors are objectively worse in low light compared to full frame at the same f-stop. Full frame aren't better because they have better f-stop (they don't) - they're better because they have bigger sensors with `photosites (pixels) that usually gather more photons each - resulting in less variance that causes ISO fuzz.
I still prefer crop sensor (I'm on an X-T5) because I think the trade-off is worth the lighter camera. But for low light, full frame has an advantage.
To clarify - both sensors record the same intensity. But full frame grabs more photons. If you took my X-T5 and doubled its size, it'd grab twice as many photos per pixel and get better ISO (and I think dynamic range) as a result.
@@djstuc And then the crop sensor 'crops' out a lot of the light that's gathered. Hence why so many professional, high-end photographers out there explained the low-light benefits of full frame. There's a reason why astronomers like bigger sensors, not just bigger lenses.
As several others have commented. Anything from f/2.8 onwards is fast. @@mikefoster6018
@@djstuc I don't know what you are on about. The only thing I commented on is the incorrect... click-bait - title. It says you don't need a fast lens and then Faizel sets out with only fast lenses to demonstrate.
To square with his title he should be showing us how to shoot with a kit-lens zoom with a max aperture of f/3.5. It would be tricky. But just about feasible. I would not take it on, though. I think you DO need a fast lens for night time shooting... f/2.8 or faster.
I did a two-year project of night time street photography with a f/1.4 lens. Some years later I did another night time project (and made it into a couple of books) with a Fuji f/2 lens. Improvements in sensors meant it was much easier shooting with the f/2. ISO1600 and 3200 showed no appreciable noise in the books I had printed.
in my experience, you can go with 2.0 and slower for a really low light night photos if you have both or one of those:
- camera that handles high iso really good, like 6k or smth
- you have some kind of stabilisation, either build in or a gimble or just a stand, that will allow you to slow down your shutter without making shaky photos
My X-T1 got none of those, so 1.4 is the answer.
2.0 also works, just not that great
also that heavily depends on the city, New York, Bangkok, Tokyo and all that have enormous amounts of night lights, go to Berlin and you would be suffering
Great video Faizal, F2 is super perfect for night shooting, great photos, Love the pix you took of the empty diner in China Town, very eerie! you have such a great eye!!!
When I shoot at night I usually use an f/2 or f/1.8 lens, any faster isn’t really needed. But I did a (short albeit) night shoot with an f/4 zoom lens at one point and it worked perfectly fine on my canon R6 mk2 at iso 6400.
Night photography is a lot of fun and can get very moody. It brings out another dimension most of us don't pay much attention to. I'm sure the non-photographers consider noght to be an inconvenience. Those of us that enjoy it understand the moodiness and beauty that can be found at night. Darkness is particularly good for capturing liminal images. Cheers to you Faizal for showing just how interesting night pics can be.
Thank you for enriching my life through your calm and relaxing way of talking together with your supreme videography
New York is such an inspiring place for street photography. I hope to come back again in the future.
Sir, your videos (and photos) just keep getting better and better.
I love how you played with blur and shapes. Even more so, stopping down to F8? Wow.
Love the shots you took they are very moody and unique
My first experiences with night time street photography was when I was moving across the US. I drove to see a friend in Chicago and walked around with them and my zeiss 135mm 2.8 shooting around 1/60 and ISO 3200-5000 It was a wonderful experience. Two days later I was in NYC with another friend shooting with that same setup. Some of the best photos I've taken to date were on those two days. A year or so later I walked around Boston at night with a 500c loaded with delta 3200 and night-time street photography is one of my favorite things to do.
This was my favorite video you made by far. You’re coming into your style of filming these. This was such a calming and wonderful video 🤙🏽
I was about to save up for the 56 1.2 WR. I already have the 23 1.4 wr - and think it’s a bit big!
This 50 f2 is super tempting also for its size. Thank you for making me less skeptical for the main weakness I assumed the lens would have.
I recently bought a pocket tripod that extends to just over 3ft and for my night photography it's been a game changer. Certainly breathes new life into my slower lenses. It's the kind of tripod to make most photographers wince (myself included) but the fact it can go in your back pocket and be ready to use within 3 seconds makes it an essential part of my kit going forward. Typically, tripods (even the regular travel tripods) make you stand out plus they need to be carried in a separate bag but with this thing it's a no brainer. More night photography guys should definitely consider using one. Though, good luck trying to find one. The only one I could find that was small enough for a trouser pocket but extendable to 3.5ft was by Hama. As far as I can tell, nothing else like it exists. Wouldn't dream of using it with my D810 though. Strictly a Fuji X100 and Sony RX1 tripod.
Bought the Urth 1/4 for my 35mm f2 and could not be happier with it. Great work as always, Faizal!
Isn't "fast" under f2,8 ?
My thoughts also. F2 still a rather good lens.
I guess it could be! I always looked at f/1.8 or 1.4 lenses as "fast" lenses, but the point is still the same
@@julesc5571 No, the light gathering capability doesn't change regardless of the sensor size. It is still f/2. What changes is the depth of field, which would make an f/2 lens have f/3 full-frame equivalent DOF.
@@ThatAndre *with equivalent framing. Standing at the same distance to the subject instead, the DOF would be exactly the same but with a crop.
Awesome video again man! Love seeing your mindset and your pics. If you posted an unedited vid of a shooting session I’d watch the whole thing, it’s so relaxing!
Once again inspiring us to get out there and practice! Love this Faizal
Oh, I love that tilted motion blur - got to try that sometime! Great video btw 🇬🇧
Moody! The music goes so well with the visuals.
Just got a backpack clip for my Osmo Pocket 3, kinda nice cause you can also have the pocket be "horizontal as well. I haven't tried making a "photo walk" video yet - but imagine it might work well for you!
Thanks for the rec!
Those filters look cool! I have a couple of Urth lens adapters and I'm really happy with them. For winter photography I got a cheap pair of cycling gloves on Amazon from a brand called Ozero that are thin enough that I can mostly still control my camera, they have a little conductive fabric on the index finger for touch screen use, and they're waterproof. They definitely make winter photography more bearable!
Fantastic vlog, some incredible images too 👍
You nailed it! That’s why I'm so addicted to shooting at night. Great video.
Love a lot of the shots you took in this video, I highly recommend going back to Chinatown on a night when there is light snow/rain you'll get some really cool cyberpunk looking shots
I enjoyed this one. Really gave me the urge to get out with the camera. Thank you!
You got some wonderful shots on that photo walk. I really appreciate you sharing those filters, I was not familiar with them. I need to check them out. I love the affect they had on your images.
This is art!🙏🏼
That was cool. I’m new to this and haven’t got out to shoot at night yet. I enjoyed this a lot. Thanks!
03:47 I was fishing at the same pond during my NYC trip in January 🙌
I have some F1.4 even F0.95 lenses, but they are quite dim wide open, so it's rare that I can take nice and sharp photos at that aperture. I also prefer to use them F2 and up. Also keep in mind that Fujifilm focuses on the nose instead of the eyes lol :D so if you take a head shot @1.4, the eyes are already gonna be blur.
I would like to add tho, that F2, F2.8 are still fast lenses. What you're trying to show on this video should make sense if you shoot F4 or F5.6. Those are apertures of cheap kit lenses.
fuji does have eye autofocus, at least my camera does...
@@ichheissedamian of course it has, that's what I'm talking about. It locks on the eye, but when you zoom in on your computer, it won't be the eyes that's sharp... misfocuses, so it's normally the face or the top of the nasal bone that's sharp, but not the iris
When you let the iso 'do its thing'.. what were your parameters?
I have my max ISO set to 6400
Mate, I love the background music which you use in your videos! 🔥
F2 is totally fine if the scene is well lit. However, try the same thing on the city outskirts and without f1.4 or greater, high ISO or tripod, or at least good IBIS or OIS, you might have a problem...
Omg I saw you guys filming while walking to the gym!
I use an f4 and truthfully it pushes me to more hyper sensitive and creative with what I want to take photos of. I like it though it’s kinda fun
love this stuff man, you should shoot at night more often. I think it suits your contrasty edit style well.
What are you using for video?
Great work Faizal, as always. Also, congratulations on your move to NY. You deserve every success. It's been great watching the channel grow. Keep going, don't give up and all 223k of us will continue to watch. Have an epic 2024.
Love this video, thanks for sharing it! At 7:18, what settings were you changing with your shortcut button there?
Absolutely amazing pictures and a great idea for such a walk. The night city is most inspiring for me. But I guess it would be a bit scary to walk alone at night. 😅
....my lucky yt photog channels surfing time...got to sub....I'm looking forward to catching up with your past vids....
Great pics, as always, I need to get some nighy street photography in my portfolio.
For the POV camera, there isn't an elegant solution for the Osmo Pocket, so might be best to just use if when talking to camera (looks good in low light btw), then use GoPro/Osmo Action for POV.
You could use the Insta360 Go 3 for both, as you could mount that quickly to your chest, then pop into the action pod for vlogging. But it won't be as good in low light as it's a smaller sensor and doesn't fo 4k. Maybe the go 4 will do.
Keep up the great videos and photos!
Great shots and inspiring video as always. You make the process seem so effortless. How do you go about making sure things are in focus? In the video it just looked like you were shooting from the hip one handed but still get crisp subjects.
If you're focusing on where light is bright, the camera will generally have an easy time focusing
Thanks for taking the time to reply. So are you getting your subject in the bright light then focussing with half shutter press then recomposing? It’s the way you’re doing it so effortlessly and one handed that made me curious. Again really great content and thanks for the reply.
Great video! I also believe that photographers use a faster lens to shoot at night without having to increase their ISO. Resulting a noisy image which some people don't like. But who cares.
I mean, try shooting all that without ibis, which the XT5 has and is pretty solid for still. I had an XT2, great camera even in 2024, but unless you crank up the ISO, you better have surgeon still hands or a tripod.
I do only low light or very low light never used filters just point and shoot. Best result lens is f/1.8 or faster even on the Lumix S5ii.
Great video. Thank you. Really good capture of NY at "night". But just FYI -- I consider an f2 as a fast lens. Wherein, I would consider something like a f3.5-5.6 to be a slow lens. And anything less, like an f1.2 or f0.8 to be "God-like" fast apertures. So f2? It's a fast lens in my book. Either way, great use of mist filters. Cool images. And I really liked it's use on the video, too.
Cinematography, especially the music, was awesome this video. I kinda just zoned out, it was great. Hope to find the essence of this video in future content also!!
Wow! What an incredible video! The music and atmosphere are absolutely mesmerizing. I'm curious, could you share the photometry and exposure dial settings you used?
I usually always use spot metering and I usually don't use the exp comp dial :)
Hello Faizal, i’ve been watching all your video those past month. And sometimes I caught myself having feeling of a spider sens tanglling for candid photography. Those past months i was deeging a lot in camera gear and really liked the fuji_xE4 for is spec and esthetics. But i realized that in your last videos you are haven.t used it. Have you sell it ? Have you been bother by anything ? would love to know why if you can share more details here or in dm. Thank you a lot for your content it is very relaxing and educative cheers from france 🎉
Great video ! Was this all film handheld with the Lumix S5II ?
Excellent shots 😎
I could 100% argue that the best time for night photography is most definitely summer. Lol.
I really enjoyed this. I thought the accompanying music gave the film a sense of slight trepidation that shooting at night always seems to give me
Hey, just wondering if you plan on keeping the lumix after this "trying out" period ends? Would appreciate some extended thoughts now that you've had it for awhile
great video, Faizal!
F/2 is pretty darn fast. // I used to try to shoot with a f/3.5 - f/5.6 kit zoomie in low light... and was sorely disappointed. I learned my lesson.
Ethereal vibes, very cool results. It seems like you are using the electronic shutter in this video, do you not see any banding issues with the artificial lighting?
nice collection faizal :)
F2 is pretty fast regardless crop of full frame sensor. You gain at least 1-stop compared to your zoom lens which can be really helpful in night photography. 1/15 > 1/30s SS without IS.
Needed this. Felt like I’ve been struggling with my night photos lately
Very nice video, source for photography inspiration🙏
how do you like these urth filters in comparison to cinebloom filters?
dude you're going out in the brightest parts of New York with an f2 lens and then make a video about the fact that "You Don't Need a Fast Lens for Night Photography"
LOL! Indeed.
F2 with IBIS should never be an issue , that's a huge advantage for night shooting.
In a city where he is shooting, meanwhile me in the dark with an f/0.95...
last time i was in nyc my sleep schedule was messed up so i spent 9 nights straight just walking around shooting. i got like 150 instagram posts out of like 4000+ shots. bad timing though because it was right when stills died out on instagram
Why is there’s so much smoke in New York City?
Yup. And thanks for this video!
Hey man, great video! And if you don't mind sharing, what's the lens hood that you have on there?
Its from Squarehood !
Hey Faizal, great video as always. Love the music. The Blackmist filters are great too. You mentioned that you were testing the Osmo Pocket 3 for low light use. What did you think?
It's light years better at night than the GoPro! I thought it looked great
Phew now i fell better about ordering the 23mm f2, i wanted to get the 35mm 1.4 but then i mostly shoot street and 50mm ff equivalent is a bit tight. Was worried about missing in that 1 stop of light and dof but i feel easy after reading the comments. I got thr xpro3 so no ibis for me but i think i would be carrying a tripod with me on night photowalks. Thought about getting that old 23mm 1.4 but that lens is huge and ruins the reason of getting the xpro in the first place. Can someone also share their experience with using manual focus in night time street photograohy with fuji ? I am tempted on getting them but i am worried about on lack of manual focussing skills.
Would you do a video on your setup for your GR like you did for your x100v.
I mean... IN A CITY sure. If you're shooting at night in a misty graveyard, you need a real fast lens.
I was about to say the same, plenty of light in a city. What I call low light is clearly not what he calls it! I simply could not use a lens at f/2 for my night time shots.
Hey, what’s the lens hood you are using on the 50mm ?
You don't need fast lens, but then using f2 lense? Explain to me please? I was thinking you will use f4 or f5.6
Not gonna lie this felt a bit like The Batman or The Joker and it's so damn good!!
the mist effect of those filters gives the look of 1970s cinema
Were you using Mechanical or Electronic Shutter? I often wonder this when there are a lot of subjects that might react to the sound and sight of a camera. I suspect the shutter noise was simply lost to the street, but I am curious.
I believe the electronic shutter produces less vibration and is quieter. Google it.
Gotta get the gloves on bro! Keep those paws warm! Great stuff!
Excelent video. Music playlist, please.
F2 is very fast, only like a 1/3 of stop slower than f1.8, a slow lens is like a f3.5 or f4
This guy: FranceWheeler - rides a powered wheel through Paris. He shoots video with what looks like an Osmo Pocket 3 mounted up above his shoulder on some kind of harness/rig. He doesn't say what gear he uses but I noticed a shadow in one of his two most recent videos. Very smooth imagery - video POV higher than a bicycle and just above car roofs.
New York is the mecca for street photography
I am struggling at night also.
knp di negara orang malam2 bagus ya jalannya
ya man get a blacked out chest mount for the gopro
I thought you were going to be using an f5.6 xD
I noticed you shoot in little bursts. Is that normal for you?
Shooting in burts will help you with motion blur due to camera shake when you press the shutter button. Once you hold the shutter down, the camera will have stabilised by the time the 3rd photo is taken. I learnt this from one of Roman Fox's videos. Really helps with using low shutter speed at night.
Amazing video
You Don't Need a Fast Lens for Night Photography - Putting F2 lens lol
We New York photographers love the street steamers! At least I Ido.
Haha, good to know ;)
Oh yeah, that is in NY with the newest camera with crazy high iso ;-) right one does not need. Lets repeat that statement with f4.5 and max non-mushy iso of 800 otside of the biggest megapolis in the world wo long exposure
F2 is fast
Great video…
I was shooting few days ago in a snow area in one nice Moscow park. There were no food nearby, very few ppl. I was happy that I've put a worm porridge (in a wide thermos jug) in my backpack. Thus I've got some energy before the dark. So after that I've continued to shoot in the beautiful "light gallery". There is a place where a lot of stylized lamps are installed. It's practically in a wood (narrow area almost near water canal). LEDs changes colors so I was tooking different photographs standing in the places where I was thinking that I get some really nice shots.
It was about -10 - -15C! :) So it's not NY's temperatures I guess.
Take a warm case for your camera and you'll not get your hands frozen!
The video is called you don't need a fast lens and then he shoots with an F2 which is fast. WTF is the point then?
Of course you don't need a fast lens when taking night photos at decently lit streets.