My dear friend Catherine came over to my house in Tempe and we took these photos of her a few days before the 4th of July. I love sparklers and every year I make a point to get photos of friends with sparklers. The whole week before the 4th of July, I had different friends come over and I took pictures each night right before it got dark. It was so much fun and I plan to do it again in 2022, so if we are friends and you would like photos with sparklers, let me know! You’ll not just get sparklers photos when you come to my house, you’ll get ice cream too!
I hung up seamless background paper that I bought from Savage Universal online and then hung up banner fringe that I got from Party City. I wish I had thought to iron out the wrinkles somehow. I will do that next time, though I am not sure how! I used the banner fringe in front of my lens to get the effect that you will see when you scroll through the photos. I love this effect soooo much and see photographers doing it a lot with trees and flowers. I even see photo journalists doing it to make images more interesting. I don’t know if there is a name for it! I need to find out. The first thing that comes to mind is that it is the bokeh effect, but it’s not only that…so is there a particular name for it?
There is such a learning curve to taking photos with sparklers, and I feel like I learn a little more every time I take photos with sparklers. Here are some of my tips:
Make sure you have a bucket of water nearby for people to put sparklers in when they no longer want to hold them. If you have a garden hose, keep that nearby and ready to use if any sparks go astray. I’ve never needed to use my garden hose, but it was good to have it close by, just in case.
Use a lens with the widest aperture that you can. F2.8 or less is great to use, if you have that kind of lens. I love my Canon L 1.2 mm and I used that for this photo shoot. You could rent a lens, if you need one with a wider aperture.
A lot of times when you do a photo shoot, you want the hour or two before sunset for the perfect golden light. For sparkler photos, you will get a few minutes, maybe 10-15 minutes where the light will be perfect for sparklers. Goldilocks light - when it’s not too light and not too dark. Start paying attention in the week before you shoot to find out when those minutes will be. For me, in July, in Arizona, that time arrived at about 7:20/7:30 PM and was gone about 10-20 minutes later.
If you need more than ~20 minutes of perfect light, consider using continuous lighting. I didn’t for this shoot, but in the future I might rent lighting from LensProToGo. They don’t just rent lenses, they rent pretty much anything a photographer could need, at prices that are easier than other places I have rented from.
As with a lot of portrait photography, getting a little higher than your subjects can be helpful, but I feel it’s especially helpful with sparkler photos. I had a step ladder that I stood on to make taking photos a little easier.
Lighting sparklers is kind of tedious, so by the third night of shooting photos, I put some candles in mason jars and used them to light the sparklers instead of lighters or matches. That made it a little bit easier.