It's soccer season!
Gallery
I love shooting soccer. The 20D paired with the Sigma 70-200 f2.8 is a great combo. Had no problem shooting at f2.8 and still getting in-focus, sharp photos.
This gallery is straight out of the camera except for web resizing.
Lee
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Comments
thanx!
troy
Here's where I'm at so far:
1. I shoot wide open at f2.8 -- the Sigma 70-200 f2.8 can handle it, and it helps separate the players from the parents watching them. If your lens isn't sharp wide open, you might consider stopping down one notch.
2. ISO as low as I can go and still have shutter speeds above 1/500. With a slower shutter speed you could get some "motion blur" shots which can be a nice creative choice...but I usually don't bother.
3. Pay attention to the histogram and use exposure compensation to keep the graph snugged to the right. Personally, I don't mind blowing out the white shorts so much. Our kids have these really shiny white shorts and if I don't blow them out a bit, the photos are fairly dark.
4. Circular polarizer if you have too bright a sky.
5. Position yourself to not shoot directly into harsh sun. Otherwise...position yourself to have less clutter in the background (the parents, parking lot, etc.)
6. Set drive to continuous shooting -- squeeze off shots in 2 to 3 shot bursts.
7. Set focus mode to AI servo. Pay attention, it's not magic, and you can lose focus. When you do, just put the center AF point over the player and re-half press to gain focus. Keep half pressed and follow the action waiting for your moment to rattle a few off. Pay attention to the focus and let up and half press again as needed.
8. Look for the stories. Action, of course. Right before they kick. Right as they shift directions. When players tussle with each other. The reaction right after a goal. Coaching moments.
Hope this helps.
Lee
Hey, guys, try using custom function 04, setting 03. You can then achive focus with the star button (with your thumb), follow play and then when you press the shutter exposure is set for each shot. I used it all indoor season and it works great - I often don't reset for everyday shooting. It is more convenient than half pressing, and then having to half press again.
ann
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Had much better luck with shots on this game. There seems to be a correlation between your team winning, and having opportunities for great shots.
Also, I did crop these photos, and run them through FocalBlade for sharpening.
Gallery
Lee
Used RawShooter to process the raw files with sharpening and "Outdoor Medium" settings added...and cropping via jpegcrops
Gallery
Lee
Shooting young kids playing sports is tough, with a capital T Lots of dead spots during the games and it can lull you asleep......lol Looks like you stayed awake and were right on top of the action
Thanks for sharing,
Steve
http://pics.jamesjweg.com/gallery/480120
I was hidding that camera as far up in the umbrella as I could and shooting one handed. I hate getting the camera moist, but I managed to avoid any direct water.
James.
http://www.jamesjweg.com
Lee
James.
http://www.jamesjweg.com