Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Some night time work


I have been wanting to shoot some slow shutter speed night time traffic photos around loop 250, which runs in a horseshoe shape around Midland. The building of the loop around a decade ago is credited with helping the city grow as much and as fast as it has. I have been thinking about shooting a picture page on the loop or on the city streets at night as I often have an hour or more to kill at the end of my scheduled shift at night, but haven't gone out and shot any photos for it yet. Last night I finally got started, shooting from an overpass to get this shot (this is at Midland Drive and the loop for anyone familiar with the Midland area). I will probably start out just shooting a few images over the next week or so from on and around the loop until I can find a theme I can use to unite the photos in a small photo package or picture page for the paper in the future. Honestly, the whole point of shooting last night was to get out of the office and shoot something for myself, which I don't do as often as I should. I need to keep my eyes fresh.

Tuesday, May 06, 2008

Trying out a new technique...


Stanton High school 800m runner A.J. Lozano

As I've said in another post here portraits don't come so easy for me, and sports portraits cause me more stress than most. When I arrived at work today and found out I had to drive 20 miles away for a portrait of a high school track runner I was a little nervous. I brought several flashes with me but only used one on the final shot as it was the only one I could use in a high speed sync mode with my camera. High speed sync was the only way I could keep the subject well exposed and underexpose the background using my shoe mount flashes without significant and unethical post processing (at least it would be unethical to print in the paper). I go the idea for this technique from the Strobist where I have seen a couple of examples. To be honest, I didn't stray much from what I had seen before because what I was going for was simple and pretty straight forward. One light up high and just out of frame on the left and a lower camera angle were all it took to spice up a routine photo. Next time, I would like to use multiple flashes or try this look with multiple subjects, maybe with some very controlled light, like from a snoot or grid, in a wider shot. I'm sure the opportunity will come up because we always need portraits for our player features.
I should note that stobist is one of my favorite sites. It's on a netvibes tab that I check daily with a few other blogs like A Little News. I will probably post a roundup of my favorite sites pretty soon, with these two topping the list.