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It is really cold here; 0 with a wind chill of -12. My question is are there any precautions for shooting in cold weather. I have not due to the fear of harming my camera or lens. Am I being over-protective? Are there procedures for moving the camera from warm to cold and vice-versa?
TIA for your much appreciated help. |
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When you're outside shooting in really cold weather, a good option is to keep your camera wrapped in a scarf, or put it between layers in your jacket. The reason I say layers is because if you put it right next to your body, you know how moist things get in a warm jacket, and that would create more condensation which could freeze on the camera. It also serves the dual purpose of keeping your battery warm, which keeps it going. It's very possible that the camera will become sluggish, but that's ok. Electronics can do some strange stuff in the cold. It should be ok when the camera warms up again. Now, the part that it sounds like you're really worried about is moving the camera between extreme temperatures. The best way to do this is to acclimatize your camera by letting it slowly reach the temperature rather than just doing it suddenly. A bit hard to do that if you're just heading outside, but keeping it in your jacket or otherwise wrapped up helps there. When you're taking your camera back inside though is where there's a high risk of condensation. The best tips I've found for this came from the d50 group on Flickr. Their suggestion is to put the camera in a large ziplock bag with a few of those packets of silica (you know, the things you get in your shoes, etc) and don't use the camera until it's fully warmed up. The ziplock collects the condensation instead of the camera, the silica absorbs any extra moisture in the bag, and not using the camera ensures that you don't get water into the electronics and fry it ![]() This info came from a whole bunch of threads on Flickr: Cold Weather, Snow, and a D50 Condensation and Night Shooting My 350D in the cold weather all day long? Now that you've got the info, have fun shooting!
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Nikon D90 | Sony NEX-3 Nikkor 18-55 | Nikkor 70-300 | Nikkor 50 f/1.4D | Lensbaby 2.0 | Nikkor 85 f/1.8D | Nikkor 105 f/2.8 VR | Sigma 10-20 f/4-5.6 | Nikkor 10.5 f/2.8 Fisheye | Sony 16 f/2.8 | Sony 18-55 | 2xSB600 | Orbis Ring Flash Adapter My Flickr |
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Definitely agree with everything above.
A couple things I'd recommend: - warm gloves that allow enough dexterity to change controls, etc. - get those chemical hand-warmers to put in your bag with the camera when you're not using it to keep the battery warm - try to keep snow off the camera! I tried taking shots while we were dog-sledding, and the camera got covered in snow, which then started to melt... I haven't noticed any adverse effects yet, but water is horrible for electronics! one thing I ran into while taking shots in northern Norway is that my auto-focus would freeze up. That can get interesting. So keep an eye on whether or not your shots are still in focus. |
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with that said, when i do go out in the cold, i use the ziplock technique as Nicole mentioned. i also have an enclosed porch where i put my camera for about 10 minutes before/after i go out so it adjusts to a different temperature. haven't had a problem with condensation yet.
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-Matt Canon 30D, 17-40 f4L, 50 f1.8, Sigma 70-200 f2.8 DG Macro, 30 f1.4, battery grip, 430EX speedlight, Nikon SB-25, wireless transmitters/remotes, various filters, etc, etc. msm fotki OR msm flickr |
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