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Showing posts 1 - 14 of 14, (reverse)
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04/28/2007 10:09:58 PM · #1
and sometimes you create your own luck


the goal is chasing the moment of impact, or at least getting close enough to it that you can feel the energy and tension of the moment. for me, that's when stuff is in the air, whether it's feet, dirt, bodies, and/or a ball.
04/28/2007 10:17:13 PM · #2
Somehow I think there was more than luck involved.

Great shots, Skip!
04/28/2007 10:20:10 PM · #3
Originally posted by greatandsmall:

Somehow I think there was more than luck involved.

Great shots, Skip!


Yeah there was a "Canon EOS-1D Mark IIn" Involved.... im kidding!
04/29/2007 06:12:38 AM · #4
nice shots skip, love the soccer one. THe guy in the yellow looks like he is turning back to his team and asking what he should do, all while in mid air. lol
04/29/2007 06:44:58 AM · #5
"The harder I work, the luckier I get"
Samuel Goldwyn

Great shots Skip, Have to say my favourite is the golf bunker one - Love the way the ball is captured (almost like a planet surrounded by a nebulae of comets. Any chance of providing a few details re shutter speeds, apertures and ISO
04/29/2007 02:43:11 PM · #6
thanks for the comments!

Originally posted by jonfrommk:

Any chance of providing a few details re shutter speeds, apertures and ISO



f/4, 1/8000, iso400. shot with a 1.4TC on my 70-200

tour golf is extremely difficult to shoot. for starters, you will get thrown out if you pop a single frame before they connect with the ball. they also rope off the course, allowing media to come inside no further than an arm's distance from the rope. this makes it real work to get meaningful shots. a lot of it is being at the right place at the right time.


f/4, 1/400, iso800. shot with a 1.4TC on my 70-200

although soccer probably provide more shooting opportunities than most sports, you either have to have equipment that can reach across the field, or you have to be very patient while waiting for the action to come to you, or both. even though you can get pretty good shots throughout the game, you can't afford to turn away from the game for even a moment, or you can easily miss the best shot of the night. this was shot on an overcast evening.


f/2.8, 1/200, iso1000. shot with my 70-200

it's been mentioned elsewhere that getting a shot of a pitcher isn't that big of a deal because it's so easy to anticipate the action. that's true to an extent, but, all the same, just because you know what the action is going to be doesn't really make it an automatic shot.

Message edited by author 2007-04-29 17:38:05.
04/29/2007 02:51:58 PM · #7
Skip looking at the thumbnail of the pitcher it looks like she has a handgun lol. You look a bit closer u see a round ended object which computes more towards a glove but from a distance man its funny lookin.

Message edited by author 2007-04-29 14:52:32.
04/29/2007 03:16:18 PM · #8
actually, that's not like any other shot of a pitcher I've ever seen, so you must have done *something* special...

I hate sports shots, but these are... well, they're all right!!
04/29/2007 03:57:29 PM · #9
Skip

Thanks for the info of shot settings

If you ever find yourself in England give me a whistle and I will sort you out for a photog pass for a Rugby Union ( a proper mans game!!)

If you dont know the game then this is the sort of thing you can expect Rugby Image

In the meantime, thanks for the inspiration

Jon
04/29/2007 04:50:01 PM · #10
you just ROCK, skipper! :-)
04/29/2007 04:51:27 PM · #11
Originally posted by jonfrommk:

Skip

Thanks for the info of shot settings

If you ever find yourself in England give me a whistle and I will sort you out for a photog pass for a Rugby Union ( a proper mans game!!)

If you dont know the game then this is the sort of thing you can expect Rugby Image

In the meantime, thanks for the inspiration

Jon


Hey that image is awesome lol, little weird ya know but i like it plus the clarity and color and amount of action works well.
04/29/2007 05:10:57 PM · #12
Originally posted by Skip:


f/4, 1/400, iso8000. shot with a 1.4TC on my 70-200


Is that a typo, or did you really use ISO 8000? Obviously that is not available on a digital camera, but I didn't realize that it was an available speed on film either.

Message edited by author 2007-04-29 21:48:08.
04/29/2007 05:14:27 PM · #13
Originally posted by traquino98:



Is that a type, or did you really use ISO 8000? Obviously that is not available on a digital camera, but I didn't realize that it was an available speed on film either.


Look at the image directly above it

"f/4, 1/8000, iso400. shot with a 1.4TC on my 70-200 "


Im pretty sure this is what he meant for both images and it was a typo......

Oh an BTW Olympus has ISO 10,000 on a point and shoot and im not kidding. (Probly cruddy as heck but oh well)

Message edited by author 2007-04-29 17:15:22.
04/29/2007 08:55:15 PM · #14
yes, that was a typo--should have read iso800. thanks for the comments, glad ya'll are enjoying this stuff. and sher, you rock, too!

jon, i'd love to shoot a real, English rugby match. i shot one here last year and had loads of fun, but really had no clue what i was doing or what was going on.
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