Mr PC wrote:
My Nikon D5200 will do 2 or 3 exposures rapid fire or on demand with the shutter button or a wired or wireless remote shutter release. I'm guessing nakkh is right in that it's a pretty standard DSLR feature. I have a Canon SX-510 superzoom and it doesn't do it.
No, Tom asked about the multiple exposure on a single frame, not burst mode shooting (Number of exp./sec)!
Any DSLR should have that!
Tom G wrote:
Will someone please give me a short list of cameras that have multiple exposure capability?
Naturally, I would a good camera a reasonable price.
Thanks you,
Tom G
Any of the Nikon or Canon DSLRs will do multiple exposures.. with a minimum of 3 frames per sec and some much faster... The D7100 will shoot 6fps for a short time and faster in jpg. Nikonusa.com website will give the fps of each camera in their tech specs. I am pretty sure Canon will too.. Neither Canon or Nikon will let the other do something that they don't do.
Thank you for these links!
Tom G. When you say multiple exposure capability,you mean double exposure on one frame. The Fuji X series cameras will allow you to do this.
wingclui44 wrote:
No, Tom asked about the multiple exposure on a single frame, not burst mode shooting (Number of exp./sec)!
Any DSLR should have that!
ok that I wasn't sure about... multiple exposures on a single frame, It would depend... The D7100 will do it in HDR mode to a jpg only as far as I know.
The Olympus 620 has multi-exposure.
5d mark III, very easy to use. great results
Mubashm
Loc: Gaithersburg, Maryland
Hi Tom. I have Canon 5d mark iii which has multiple exposures function . If it is out of your budget, you can consider
Canon 6d camera which has multiple exposure function as well. This camera is around 1700.00. This camera is also full frame and also Wi Fi function whereas mark iii does not have this function.
Mohammed
Multiple exposure is not the same as continuous shooting or exposure bracketing or HDR.
Generally speaking, multiple exposure is combining two or more different images into a single final image. With film, multiple images were shot without advancing the film, creating an overlay effect. You had to underexpose, to allow for the acculated exposure of the multiple images.
Most digital cameras cannot do true multiple exposure. But a few recent models do offer it (such as Canon 5DIII and 6D).
Gene51 is right. In fact, there's very little reason to do multiple exposure in-camera with digital cameras. It's far easier, much more controllable, and considerably more precise to combine images after the fact during post-processing with your computer and various software processes (for example, using layers in overlay or various blending modes, in Photoshop). I'd look into doing that, before going looking for a camera that can do multiple exposures.
amfoto1 wrote:
There's very little reason to do multiple exposure in-camera with digital cameras.
Please read other people's posts before making such a sweeping statement...
Tom G wrote:
Will someone please give me a short list of cameras that have multiple exposure capability?
Naturally, I would a good camera a reasonable price.
Thanks you,
Tom G
Do you just mean multiple exposures or DOUBLE exposure.
mel
Loc: Jacksonville, Florida
Tom G wrote:
Will someone please give me a short list of cameras that have multiple exposure capability?
Naturally, I would a good camera a reasonable price.
Thanks you,
Tom G
Can you clear this up' Do you mean several exposures in succession or, one exposure over the previous exposure like double exposure.
Tom G wrote:
Will someone please give me a short list of cameras that have multiple exposure capability?
Naturally, I would a good camera a reasonable price.
Thanks you,
Tom G
Most dSLRs, except some of Canon's higher end units, only do 3 exposures. In the case of your Sony, if it's like my Alpha 55, it does 3 exposure brackets but only .75 EV apart. If you're thinking about doing HDR work, that's not even worth talking about because it's not nearly a wide enough range. Most other brands do 3 exposure brackets 1 EV apart.
Since I was going to be doing a lot of HDR work and wanted a massive range, I did a LOT of research and found that Olympus micro-4/3 cameras do 3, 5, or 7 exposure bracketed sets - specifically so you can do HDR with them. It's even called an HDR bracketed set in the menu. And it can be as far as 2EV between each exposure. There is NO other camera in the "reasonable" price range that can do that.
It does NOT do a 7-exposure bracket HDR combination in-camera. You have to take the files out to an HDR software like Photomatix or whatever.
Mine is a Olympus PEN ePL5, which was replaced with an ePL6, and is not replaced with an ePL7, but I'd feel pretty confident that the newer ones do it tool. If you're looking for one of their dSLR bodies with viewfinder, you'll have to check on their website to learn whether they do the 7-exposure bracketing or not.
Oddly enough, Olympus does very little to advertise this capability but should push it hard because HDR work is a growing market and they have cameras in the range of $600 with 14-42mm lens included that blow away any other dSLR below $1000 for doing HDR. I actually got mine on sale for $500 a year ago.
That's my short list. Olympus.
Tom G wrote:
Thanks for your reply. I'm not at all knowledgeable about what nakkh is.
Tom
nakkh is the user that said most any DSLR would do it...
If you want to reply, then
register here. Registration is free and your account is created instantly, so you can post right away.