

Use silhouettes and experiment with blend modes (e.g., Multiply, Overlay, Soft Light, Screen) to achieve different effects.Create double exposures by combining complementary images, such as a portrait and a landscape, or an abstract texture and a detailed image.

What You’ll Learn in the Luminar Neo Tutorial

It works better in the camera if you have a subject that is dark and has strong backlighting or a bright background like a silhouette. When you’re doing a double-exposure plan the subjects in the two images carefully first. So just test them all and learn what they each do. Experimentation and trial and error are needed for this kind of photography. Try them all out to see which one works best on a particular set of images. Canon menu Canon menu – blending mode Fuji dial Fuji menu Nikon menu – blending mode Nikon menuĭepending on the options for your camera you may be able to choose the number of images to be combined, and the blending mode (as seen above for Canon and Nikon). If you have a Sony camera let me know if this is incorrect. Apparently, Sony mirrorless cameras do not have a multiple exposure feature, at least that’s what I found in my search. If you aren’t sure how to find it or set it up, consult your camera’s user manual.īelow are menus for different Canon, Fuji, and Nikon cameras. Most digital cameras and even some cell phones have a double or multiple exposure mode. A palm tree trunk and a vine double-exposed In-camera settings and tipsįinally, it’s just fun to play around and see what you can make.
