shots per day?
How about Don
Registered Users Posts: 51 Big grins
I was reading where a guy took 1100 shots in one day? How do you do that and compose photo's at the same time? If there's 8 hrs darkness and shooting an hour befor and after sun up and down is to dark, that leaves 14 hrs to shoot photo's and somewhere along the way I assume you eat something.
14 hrs is 840 minute's. that's 1.3 shots per minute every minute of the 14 hrs! How do you do that?
14 hrs is 840 minute's. that's 1.3 shots per minute every minute of the 14 hrs! How do you do that?
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Of course, shooting 1100 shots in a day doesn't meant that he didn't throw out 99% of them.
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Just trying to put your example in a different perspective: a camera like the 7D can take pictures at 8fps. At a rate that fast, and for the sake of this example lets assume the photographer really enjoys the continuous shot feature, he would only need to have the shutter pressed down 2.3 minutes of his 840 minute day to take 1100 shots. Of course, that circumvents your question about composition.
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Is this a serious question?
If you are refering to something like still life or product shots, it would be quite some feat.
If your talking about action or sports, I cannot see why you would event ask such a question because it is extremely easy to do and would be commonplace with loads of shooters here alone.
Had I kept shooting at that pace, an 8-hour day would have netted me about 700 shots, and a 12-hour day would have netted me about 1,050 shots. So it's possible, it's just not easy to keep up that pace for hours on end.
Last weekend, I took 655 shots in one day at the fair, another concert, general shots, flowers (most were flowers).
I was going to post and ask if there was a 12-step program for photographers.
Went on a 4 hour hike yesterday, took 200 I think.
I'm not sure if I like taking that many shots or not. I feel like instead of composing the shot, I am just trying to get lucky.
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Shooting wildlife he may well be shooting at a high frame rate.
If shooting landscapes he is probably shooting bracketed exposures (3-5 per base image).
If shooting sunrise / sunset with a rapidly changing and great sky then he probably has only a relative few "compositions" but is shooting repeated bracketed shots to try to capture the perfect image.
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