Long Exposure Landscape: NIKKOR Z 20mm f/1.8 S at Dusk
The blue hour — the twenty to forty minutes after sunset when the sky transitions from orange to deep blue and the ambient light levels drop into the multi-second exposure range — is the landscape photographer’s most repeatable reliable window. The NIKKOR Z 20mm f/1.8 S is the lens that uses it best: wide enough to place a strong foreground against the sky, fast enough to gather usable light at moderate ISOs, and optically clean at the corners where ultrawide lenses frequently degrade.
At f/8 and ISO 400, the blue hour produces exposures of two to eight seconds depending on sky brightness. The Z8’s on-sensor stabilization is disabled on a tripod — IBIS searching for movement that does not exist can introduce vibration during long exposures, similar to the behavior seen on Sony bodies. Use a cable release or the camera’s self-timer (two-second delay) to eliminate any physical touch from the shutter.
The Z 20mm’s field of view at the hyperfocal distance of f/8 covers from approximately 1.3 meters to infinity. For a scene with a meaningful foreground element — water’s edge, rocks, a path — position that element within two meters of the camera. The sky and the foreground are both sharp. The frame has layers.
Long exposures during blue hour render moving water as a smooth gradient, clouds as streaks if they are moving, and any artificial light sources as clean stars at f/8 or smaller. The sky gradient itself — deeper blue overhead transitioning to lighter horizon — compresses beautifully against the darker landscape elements. This is the dynamic range condition that previously required graduated neutral density filters; modern sensors with their shadow recovery latitude increasingly allow a single RAW exposure to hold both sky and foreground without blending.
The Z 20mm f/1.8 S exhibits minimal coma and flare at f/8 — the aberrations that compound in demanding landscape light are controlled here. The image is technically quiet enough that the landscape itself is the subject, without the lens apologizing.