In the days when film cameras dominated the market, double exposure images were often created by not winding on the film between exposures. This was, of course, not always intentional, but many entertaining and intriguing images resulted, and multiple exposure photography was also used deliberately for creative effect. With digital cameras this effect is harder to achieve because once the image is captured, it is removed from the sensor, so overlaying two or more frames is difficult. However, many Canon EOS cameras now feature multiple exposure stacking of between two and nine frames.
Canon cameras including the EOS 90D, EOS 7D Mark II, EOS 6D Mark II, EOS 5D Mark IV and EOS RP have a dedicated multiple exposure function in their Shooting menu. Professional cameras such as the Canon EOS R5, EOS R6 and EOS-1D X Mark III offer additional settings. This feature is available whether you're shooting RAW or JPEG images. Within the multiple exposure shooting options, there are two methods of shooting: Function Control and Continuous Shooting. There are also several exposure settings (although not all cameras have all these options) that can be adjusted to tailor the final output to suit your needs: Additive, Average, (Comparative) Bright and (Comparative) Dark.
Bear in mind that even if your camera doesn't feature multiple exposure shooting, you can still combine images with the Compositing tool in Canon's Digital Photo Professional (DPP) software. DPP gives you even more creative options, such as adjusting the visibility and position of each image within the composite image, and selecting from a number of blending modes.
Multiple exposure shooting
Multiple exposure method
Of the two multiple exposure shooting options, Function Control is the most commonly used. It enables you to shoot each exposure separately and check it before taking the next shot. It also gives you greater control over exposure and means that you can recompose between shots. Indeed, you can access the camera menus and settings used between shots, and you don't even need to take your shots on the same day – older images can be combined to create multiple exposures.
Continuous Shooting mode is used for shooting a rapid sequence of between two and nine images, which are combined into one composite. In this mode, camera settings cannot be altered between shots. To use this mode, it's also necessary to set the camera's Drive mode to Continuous.
If you shoot in Function Control mode, you have the option to save all the source images as well as the composite, but in Continuous Shooting mode it's only possible to save the combined image.
It's helpful to shoot in Live View mode with a DSLR in Function Control mode because, as with a mirrorless EOS camera, you can see the composite image build up and can compose each successive shot accordingly.
Exposure control
The Additive exposure control works in a similar way to shooting multiple exposures with film cameras. Instead of taking each shot with the correct exposure, the total exposure is added up from each individual image. To achieve the correct result, you should underexpose each image so that the resulting image is correctly exposed once they are all combined together.
The Average setting provides an automatic exposure control whereby each image is automatically underexposed so that the final image is then correctly exposed. Unlike with the Additive setting, all of the images in the multiple exposure will be averaged and taken at the same exposure level setting.
The (Comparative) Bright setting, if available on your camera, is suitable for photographing uniformly dark scenes with bright objects superimposed on top. A classic example of such a scene would be a moon superimposed on a dark night sky, or a dancer in white against a black background – this can only be done by overlaying the bright objects within the scene.
Conversely, (Comparative) Dark, if available on your camera, is used to eliminate the bright areas of images and so overlay only the dark areas of each image. This setting is useful for shooting a subject moving across the sky during daylight hours, for example, or eliminating reflections and bright patches in an image – like the reflections you may see when photographing a portrait of someone wearing glasses.
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