Author | Thread |
|
01/30/2004 11:00:05 AM · #1 |
I did some caving photography recently in public-closed caves. It's actually pretty tricky to shot in pitch-dark dirty rocky tunnels and halls. You need somebody to operate off-camera lights, somebody as a model to act as a measure and a lot of patience with that crew.
Few examples:
What do you think?
Sahko
|
|
|
01/30/2004 11:34:15 AM · #2 |
Sahko,
Love the shots. Good exposure and lighting considering the difficulties of the subject matter. Is that you in the pictures?
Clay |
|
|
01/30/2004 04:26:09 PM · #3 |
Yes, the exposure is pretty difficult, just guess and try. I admire those who were shooting something like this on film.
|
|
|
01/30/2004 05:08:46 PM · #4 |
Incredible shots. Too bad you couldn't get those in for the NG or PWL challenges.
|
|
|
01/30/2004 10:25:49 PM · #5 |
I used to do some caving years ago. I was never able to get decent pix. Yours are excellent. |
|
|
01/30/2004 10:59:40 PM · #6 |
|
|
01/30/2004 11:36:35 PM · #7 |
I was going to say, "tell that dude to step out of frame," but he's your light source. Great pics. |
|
|
01/31/2004 03:05:34 PM · #8 |
Originally posted by DJLuba: I was going to say, "tell that dude to step out of frame," but he's your light source. Great pics. |
Well, that's the thing in caving photography, you need that person there, otherwise you couldn't tell if that dripstone or tunnel is one foot or hundred feet high.
|
|
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: 08/31/2025 01:06:16 PM EDT.