The first 3 or 4 are a little blurry but I am definitely digging them, I really enjoy shooting motocross, it always feels good to get a good photo of a rider coming out of a burm with dirt roosting out the back I just cant explain the excitement, nice set, hope to see more MX from you gary, keep em coming.
The first 3 or 4 are a little blurry but I am definitely digging them, I really enjoy shooting motocross, it always feels good to get a good photo of a rider coming out of a burm with dirt roosting out the back I just cant explain the excitement, nice set, hope to see more MX from you gary, keep em coming.
MX rules. The rooster tails really add a nice feel to the shots.
The pan + low shutter speed works well. But, it looks like you're not
panning through the shot. In otherwords, you want to pan, shoot and
keep panning through the corner.
Something else you might want to try is working "down" to the slow
shutter speeds by starting at 1/125, see how it goes and once you've
got it there, drop to 1/60. Again, shoot for a while and see what's working
for you. Keep this up until you're able to reliably get sharp focus on the
subject and that blurry background you desire.
Nice work!
Ian
Moderator Journeys/Sports/Big Picture :: Need some help with dgrin?
MX rules. The rooster tails really add a nice feel to the shots.
The pan + low shutter speed works well. But, it looks like you're not
panning through the shot. In otherwords, you want to pan, shoot and
keep panning through the corner.
Something else you might want to try is working "down" to the slow
shutter speeds by starting at 1/125, see how it goes and once you've
got it there, drop to 1/60. Again, shoot for a while and see what's working
for you. Keep this up until you're able to reliably get sharp focus on the
subject and that blurry background you desire.
You should trying panning/blurred photos at night, those look awesome, when I get home I will try to find sdome of my MX photos from a while ago and I will post them, currently I am at school and cant post them. Laterzzz.
Comments
Setup: One camera, one lens, and one roll of film.
The pan + low shutter speed works well. But, it looks like you're not
panning through the shot. In otherwords, you want to pan, shoot and
keep panning through the corner.
Something else you might want to try is working "down" to the slow
shutter speeds by starting at 1/125, see how it goes and once you've
got it there, drop to 1/60. Again, shoot for a while and see what's working
for you. Keep this up until you're able to reliably get sharp focus on the
subject and that blurry background you desire.
Nice work!
Ian
Setup: One camera, one lens, and one roll of film.