bloke wrote:Does anyone have a good method for photographing falling snow?
Snowflakes are small, so if they are too far away, you can't see them in the photo. Therefore, you have to focus on flakes close enough to appear large. That usually requires a small aperture to get more of the snowflakes within the range of the apparent sharp focus (aka, depth of field).
Also, they move faster than you think, so the shutter speed has to be enough to keep them from smearing across the frame while the shutter is open.
Unfortunately, fast shutter speeds and small apertures require a lot of light. Snowy days often don't provide that. That's why it isn't easy.
Big, fluffy, slow-falling flakes will be easier than the ones we got today, which were more ice than snow.
A telephoto lens will help, because it magnifies the snow flakes and limits the amount of background that has to be focused.
Finally, snow is white. It won't show up against a white background. Unfortunately, when it's snowing, most of the background is white. That's why it isn't easy. Find a dark background.
Tim's are about as good as I've seen.
Rick "who prefers fallen snow in the following day's bright sun, but that isn't easy, either" Denney