Smoke Photography | Low Light Photography | The Caption Clicker

The Caption Clicker



Hey clicker’s

Today we are discussing

“How to Shoot in Low Light” or “Low Light Photography”

As a beginner, I always thinking about How can I shoot Low Lighting condition such as covered or shady places in Manual Mode. And I know most of you still wondering as a beginner that shooting in Low Light is such a big huge task?. As of-course as a beginner or professional shooting in Low Light is a huge and time talking process, Most of us think that it’s magic all of The Expensive Lens and DSLR camera but the fact is you can do click the same picture with your Ordinary DSLR and Kit lens. You need to follow all the instruction given below to Shoot in Low Lighting condition.

Choosing The Right Camera and Lens.


I started shooting Photos with my Sony Cyber-Shot digital point shoot camera, Yes you read it right I started my Photography Passion with that camera in 2014. Which is good for shooting normal portrait and other kinds of stuff. And my Passion towards photography and traveling to explore with a camera.
As a beginner before choosing any camera, You should know few things about camera or lens which you are going to use.

  • Aperture
  • Shutter Speed
  • Focus Mode
  • Length

That’s all you need to know for Low Light Photography.

These are basics for choosing the right camera or lens. For beginner’s I would recommend Nikon D5200, Nikon 5300, Nikon 3300 and for canon lover, Canon 80D are the best camera to start with.

  1. Nikkor AF-S 50mm f/1.8G Lens Black
  2. Canon EF 50mm f/1.8 STM Lens (Black)

Both of the lenses are good for shooting in Low Lighting Condition as a beginner photographer. Nikon offers Nikkor AF-S 50mm f/1.8G and Canon EF 50mm f/1.8 STM both are similar like both have f/1.8 which stand for Aperture it’s mean wider Aperture to get more light than another lens. And AF-S and EF mean Auto Focus – System and Electronic Focus lens. And AF-S also stands for Auto Focus – Single mode in Nikon D-SLR and Auto Focus – System meant for lens focus function.