Taking blue hour photos
by Mice007 on jan.19, 2009, under Blue Hour
Many of my visitors asked me to write about the blue hour or night photo shooting. So let’s see:
You need a camera (I’m using digital camera so I’ll focus on this in my guide) a good and strong tripod and of course a good place to take photos.
The camera
The three most common types are compact, bridge and DSLR cameras. I’m not going into this more detailed but if you’re interested here is an article about this. All bridge and DLSR cameras are capable of blue hour and night shooting.
If you have compact type, you have make sure it is able to take 6-8 sec long exposures (night photography picture mode or with manual controls) and it has some exposure correction capabilities. Last thing is not a must, you can do it in a photo editor later but you’ll lose quality. Also there must be a setting to completely turn off the flash unit, it is not needed.

Today I took some sample photos to show you the difference between a photo at the end of the sunset, a photo during blue hour and a late blue hour (almost completely dark) photo. I also took a photo with phone to show my setup. It is nothing fancy or magic as you can see.
Taking the photo
So when everything is ready and you’re in time then find the correct composition. Always take attention to the whole picture, not just the center. Decide what you want to include in the photo, try to avoid all poles close to you, trees, or bright light sources. These can ruin your photo easily. If you checked the main subject, and all four corners then setup the exposure. The best if you have manual controls so you can set the aperture around f7-f10 and the exposure time around 1-5 seconds with a low ISO (100-200). Use the exposure meter in your camera to find the exact values depending on the actual light level. The right value is between -1EV and -2EV. If you don’t have manual controls just setup exposure correction to -1.5EV and take a test photo to see the results. If you find it too bright then apply -2EV or if it is too dark then -1EV but keep in mind the LCD screen of your camera is not really accurate.
Examples
Below you can find three examples. I took all photos in the same day, the first picture is about 10 minutes before and the third is about 20 minutes after the middle blue hour shot. So as you can see the right timing is a must to catch the best photo, this is why I created bluhour.com.
In my next post I’ll write about the photo editing to make images really nice and stunning.
Drop me a comment if you liked this post or if you have any questions.
9 Comments for this entry
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Den blå timen og fotografering | Camilla, Knut, Edvart og Aasta Marie
január 28th, 2009 on 15:10[...] du befinner deg. Du finner siden her. Det er en del eksempler på bilder tatt i den blå timen i bloggen til han som har laget [...]

január 27th, 2009 on 18:57
Thanks for the information
január 28th, 2009 on 00:26
Thank you for visiting and leaving a link to your blog here. Norway is a beautiful country and I enjoyed your photos a lot.
január 29th, 2009 on 11:36
Great blog. Ctrl + d
február 11th, 2009 on 22:21
if the monitor is not correct,then which way is it ?
to light or too dark or….?
are you going to post tips on editing?
február 25th, 2009 on 23:57
I’ve added a new page to help calibrating the monitor for proper experience. Monitor Calibration
április 8th, 2009 on 09:55
Jó ez a blog, s a bluehour.com is sokat segít, köszönet érte, ctrl+D
június 4th, 2009 on 07:53
Szia!
Tetszik a blog meg az egész website. Gratulálok.
Üdv:
Sz
augusztus 16th, 2009 on 09:17
for how long it will last for the full blue hour?
augusztus 16th, 2009 on 12:48
Hard to give you an exact number to this. It really depends on the place and season you asking from. Also it depends on the direction you taking the photo… the sky will be brighter where the sun is below the horizon and of course darker on the opposite direction.