>>4327516>If you have the option of lighting a sceneUnfortunately rather not, it's going to be rather fast and spontaneous pictures.
>but the point I'm trying to make is that you shouldn't try to expose night like it's day, let it look darkThanks! That's not what I wanted to do in the first place, I just don't want to have fully black scenes where I cannot see anything or pictures that are noisy beyond grief.
>Add light to faces or subjects of interests (shoe mount panel is the most straight forward, or point a 200W at a nearby wall/pavement to add ambient fill over a large area)I'll go with the shoe mount I think, being on a run I won't be able to mount lights wherever.
My main subjects will be cars (moving and stationary) and people but I won't focus on their faces too often (mainly from from the neck down or from behind), both day and night, "common" street photography.
>if it's truly fuckin dark, but if you're in a well lit city area you can mostly get away with orienting yourself so that the subject is exposed enough to be legible.I'm going to mostly shoot in downtown / the metropolitan area of my city and sometimes out the woods (backroads and mountain trails).
The other part is as I said vacation pictures with my family, mainly family portraits with 5 to 20 people (majority elderly people, want to capture them before they're gone) during midday and evening gatherings during dusk and landscape + monument photography during the day.