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Author Topic: Cityscape - Chong Nonsi Bridge, Silom, Bangkok  (Read 461 times)

shadowblade

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Cityscape - Chong Nonsi Bridge, Silom, Bangkok
« on: December 20, 2018, 09:53:43 am »

Peak hour traffic under Chong Nonsi pedestrian bridge, in Bangkok's busy Silom district.

A7r3 with 12-24/4 G. 16 stacked exposures at 15mm, f/10, 2.5s, ISO 100.
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Slobodan Blagojevic

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Re: Cityscape - Chong Nonsi Bridge, Silom, Bangkok
« Reply #1 on: December 20, 2018, 10:57:48 am »

Curious, what does it mean “stacked exposures”?

MattBurt

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Re: Cityscape - Chong Nonsi Bridge, Silom, Bangkok
« Reply #2 on: December 20, 2018, 11:52:24 am »

Peak hour traffic under Chong Nonsi pedestrian bridge, in Bangkok's busy Silom district.

A7r3 with 12-24/4 G. 16 stacked exposures at 15mm, f/10, 2.5s, ISO 100.

Nice image. I'm curious why you stacked instead of stopping down more for a longer exposure? Flexibility? It seemed to work well although the lines would be more contiguous with a single (or fewer) exposure(s).
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shadowblade

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Re: Cityscape - Chong Nonsi Bridge, Silom, Bangkok
« Reply #3 on: December 20, 2018, 12:06:27 pm »

Nice image. I'm curious why you stacked instead of stopping down more for a longer exposure? Flexibility? It seemed to work well although the lines would be more contiguous with a single (or fewer) exposure(s).

Three main reasons:

1 - Traffic patterns. Traffic lights here changed every 2-3 minutes. Unless you could somehow get a 150-second exposure (at minimum) all the traffic would only be coming one way, with lots of stationary vehicles. I wanted traffic coming from all directions - the 16 exposures here weren't taken one after the other, but over the course of around 10 minutes.
2 - Erratic driving patterns. Traffic doesn't flow smoothly here. Cars and motorbikes stop in the middle of the intersection, vehicles make random U-turns and some just randomly weave between multiple lines of traffic. A single long exposure leads to lots of 'ghosts' of stationary/slow-moving vehicles where they stopped/moved slowly for prolonged periods of time, as well as a large number of random trails criss-crossing the general flow of traffic and ruining the composition.
3 - Exposure. Any longer and the scene would have blown out. Even changing the aperture f/16 would have only bought me 6-second exposures. And 15mm lenses don't tend to play well with ND filters - what makes the centre acceptably dark turns the corners into deep shadow.
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RSL

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Re: Cityscape - Chong Nonsi Bridge, Silom, Bangkok
« Reply #4 on: December 20, 2018, 01:39:05 pm »

Great guns. I'm glad I'm not visiting Bangkok any longer.
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Eric Myrvaagnes

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Re: Cityscape - Chong Nonsi Bridge, Silom, Bangkok
« Reply #5 on: December 20, 2018, 03:56:46 pm »

Reasons 1 and 2 sound a lot like Boston.   :'(
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Paulo Bizarro

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Re: Cityscape - Chong Nonsi Bridge, Silom, Bangkok
« Reply #6 on: December 21, 2018, 05:25:36 am »

Well done.
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