DPChallenge: A Digital Photography Contest You are not logged in. (log in or register
 

DPChallenge Forums >> Photography Discussion >> Question - Shooting Basketball
Pages:  
Showing posts 1 - 5 of 5, (reverse)
AuthorThread
11/01/2006 10:19:01 PM · #1
I have been shooting outdoor sports for my children's school with a fair amount of success, so they have asked if I can take photos of the basketball team. This is new territory for me.

I went to a practice today and experimented with lighting, lenses, etc., and ended up with as many questions as answers.

For those who shoot basketball, what lens to you typically use? 50mm? 70MM, zoom? Where do you position yourself for the most effective shots? I found the 50 the easiest to follow the action, but end up having to crop them to death to get a decent composition.

Here are a couple of samples from today. I was more working with lighting than anything so the compositions themselves aren't that great. I set up an Alien Bee (800) on a walkway above the gym and flashed it out on the ceiling. The ceiling is smooth and a bright white, so it relfects and disbursed the light well.


Any tips you can share would be much appreciated.
11/01/2006 10:27:08 PM · #2
If the Pentax has a 1.6 sensor factor like the Canon 20D/30D then 50mm 1.8 fixed lens is a good choice. It lets you shot at 2.0 if necessary to get the shutter speed (1/500 minimum) to stop the action

I like to sit on the baseline halfway between the goal and the side line when shooting with a short lens. I like to shoot the player in the lane around the basket. To shoot to the other side on the court you'll need something in the 200mm to 300mm range.

The lighting looks OK in the fist image. You saved the 2nd image a a GIF (Don't do that!) so I can't tell much about it.

Here's one form my sports shooting days taken with an 85mm on 35mm film, very close to a 50mm on your camera.

//www.designltd.com/photographics/tourney.htm

Here's a couple taken with a 300mm

//www.designltd.com/photographics/hakeem.htm
//www.designltd.com/photographics/hararra.htm

Basketball was my favorite sport to photograph.

Good luck!
11/01/2006 10:45:23 PM · #3
The GIF was definitely accidental.

Thanks.
11/01/2006 11:17:22 PM · #4
The problem that often arises in high-school indoor sporting events is that the lighting isn't as bright as you'd want it to be. They usually are not as brightly lit as college or pro arenas.

This is not always the case, but years ago high school gymnasium lighting could be dim and unless you had a fast lens, you would get blurred motion. With today's high school gyms' lighting, f/4 should suffice, otherwise an f/2.4 or faster may be needed.
11/27/2006 02:34:26 PM · #5
I have been shooting my daughter's basketball games for one season, using a Nikon D70S with a 28-80mm zoom, and positioning my self on the baselineabout 20 feet left or right of the basket. A unstatistical sample of my shooting data indicates that the majority of shots were between 40mm and 80mm. On occasion I used a 70-200mm lens; the majority of those shots were at 70-90mm. Some swear by the 70-200 but I found it was too close to the under the boards action. I plan on adding an 18mm - 200mm to my bag when it becomes available. I think the 200mm will be a plus on zooming in on players at the bench and scorers table. I also found a sideline position was nice for some defense shots and upclose shots of the guards.

I was interested to see your photos taken with the Alien Bees (it appears they aren't on the site), I want to add these to my gear as well. Could you please send them to me? How do you like them?

Originally posted by Nobody:

I have been shooting outdoor sports for my children's school with a fair amount of success, so they have asked if I can take photos of the basketball team. This is new territory for me.

I went to a practice today and experimented with lighting, lenses, etc., and ended up with as many questions as answers.

For those who shoot basketball, what lens to you typically use? 50mm? 70MM, zoom? Where do you position yourself for the most effective shots? I found the 50 the easiest to follow the action, but end up having to crop them to death to get a decent composition.

Here are a couple of samples from today. I was more working with lighting than anything so the compositions themselves aren't that great. I set up an Alien Bee (800) on a walkway above the gym and flashed it out on the ceiling. The ceiling is smooth and a bright white, so it relfects and disbursed the light well.

[thumb]421430[/thumb][thumb]421431[/thumb]
Any tips you can share would be much appreciated.
Pages:  
Current Server Time: 09/10/2025 09:35:19 AM

Please log in or register to post to the forums.


Home - Challenges - Community - League - Photos - Cameras - Lenses - Learn - Help - Terms of Use - Privacy - Top ^
DPChallenge, and website content and design, Copyright © 2001-2025 Challenging Technologies, LLC.
All digital photo copyrights belong to the photographers and may not be used without permission.
Current Server Time: 09/10/2025 09:35:19 AM EDT.