So far, I haven't quite figured out how to shoot a lit Christmas trees in a darkened room. My flash always goes off and ruins the whole look I was trying to capture as you can tell in the shot of our Christmas tree this year.


The photo below is the feeling I'm going for. I managed to successfully get the look by switching over to the night shot on my camera and got up close. Not bad, but the shot I took from a few feet away, was a blurred mess.

I decided to do a little research. Here's what I found out from a few photographers. So my question was, "How do I get this look from far away and keep my flash from going off?" Since this is my journal, I am recording what they said here.
- Tripod. From far away, you'll need to use manual settings with a very slow shutter speed to get enough light into the picture. You won't be able to hold the camera still in your hands long enough to do this, or it will be, as you saw, a blurred mess(your camera manual will tell you how to shut off the flash). I would shut off the flash, position your tripod back far enough to get the tree in the frame, set a high ISO (1600), a low f stop (3.5 or lower if possible), and start with a 1-second shutter speed. See how that looks and go slower if you need to. For a less grainy picture, you'll want a lower ISO (400 if you can do it), but that means you have to either reduce the f-stop even more (and you may not be able to) or keep the shutter open longer (with a tripod, that should work).~ G.
- Place your camera on a tripod and frame the shot. You want a very slow shutter speed, a wide aperture and a low ISO. Usually with low light you want to use a higher ISO bc it makes the sensor more sensitive to light, but if you are using a tripod you can go lower bc you don't have to worry about camera shake. ~ W.
- Tripods are essential when shooting this sort of thing. I have a Cannon Rebel so I am not as familiar with the settings on your camera, but the suggestions above are great.
For (my picture) I posted, I didn't actually use a manual setting, I used my camera's "no flash" setting because my son was taking pics too. Instead of switching manual settings around, I just put it on no flash. Sounds like the setting you used above. BUT, again, you need a tripod. My secret is to take multiple shots. Just keep shooting. If you have the feature on your camera that just keeps shooting for as long as you hold down the trigger, that is ideal. I have many shots of this, mostly all blurry as my son moved quite a bit. I finally got a shot where he happend to be standing still long enough for the shutter speed. Also, I used a tripod. ~ B.
So the consensus among them is USE THAT TRIPOD! I still have so much to learn, but am glad for people that share their knowledge with me as it helps me be better at what I do! So, I will be experimenting in the next few days and if I am successful or not, I will share my trial and error with you.
If you personally have any other helpful suggestions, or if you've had experience shooting at night with only the tree lit, I'd love to hear more feedback!!
So let me get my tripod out of my tool kit and learn how to use it! If you happen to learn a little something along with me, I say, "Great! The more the merrier!!"
Leaning on His Everlasting Arms,
Denise






















It gives the portrait an old-fashioned vintage look to it. I like the graininess of it. This was my first time to practice with it, so, although it's nowhere near as beautiful as Nadia's work, I'm sure going to enjoy practicing.








