>>3428890>1/40 shutter speedAt night without a tripod your hands move ever so slightly in that 40th of a second and this becomes very obvious with light against dark.
Raise ISO and up the shutter speed, decrease that f/number as much as possible towards 2.
>>3428891>framing angle: boring compositon>white balance: autoStaircases are sources of lines following a same direction; angle this shot instead from a 2/3rds rule corner so all visible lines are semi parallel; also use the "sunny" white balance to give the image more warmth.
>>3428893>f/4.5Much better framing, central-center vanishing point, but suffers again from a lack of a tripod and auto white balance. Here you want to have as much of the whole storefront length in focus, which means a higher f/number = longer depth of focus, but lets in less light, meaning a tripod is a must: "Sunny" white balance, a tripod to allow using 1/5th of a second or longer, ISO 500 and f/16 is a start.
>>34288961/15 shutter speed
Good image, but distractive elements like the palm in the way and the red-neon detract quite strongly. Good framing = better composition. Again anything slower than 1/60th of a second at night will give obvious jitter to anything moving or living things holding the camera.
>>3428900>Flash, compulsoryUse. A. Tripod. Long exposure with low ISO, try slow bakung dark shots that have a little external light. That will eventually build up into an evenly lit image of the whole tunnel with a better effect. You can only light the first yard or so with your flash, thats it. The camera will pick just that up, everything else remains dark, and the image is just boring.
>>3429595>Eiffel towerNot a bad photo but a too iconic landmark useful only for practice, but overdone to the max. Find more original subjective and objective content.
>>3429596>1/320>2500 ISOIf you can go down to 1/100 or 1/60 of a second without inducing movement blur, you should. Unnecessarily high ISO means more noise.
1/2