Originally Posted by
Alan
I would suggest taking a few exposures (set your camera to Av, as high of an ISO that you can that will give you a fairly fast shutter speed --perhaps, 1 second at the longest), then for your first shot at 0 eV, take the shot. Do another one at -1 eV, and another at -2 eV. One at +1 eV would bring out the shadows more, but the exposure will be longer.
Time the shots when the beam is where you want it to be. Since you can hang around for a long time while the beam spins around, you have an opportunity to take lots of shots, so don't skimp.
Pick the best of the various eV images that match up. Blend the images together. You should be able to get a good blend this way.
If you try bracketing with 3 exposures, you'll miss two out of the three shots for a proper "beam" look, so I wouldn't recommend bracketing on a moving object ( in this case, the light). That's why you should wait for the beam to swing to the right spot, and take your "x eV" shots individually (I hope I'm explaining this clearly enough).