Where is this shot?
Than you, I think half of my problem was that she was 5 hours late and the whole thing wrecked my entire day and part of my Sunday in the process. I guess when stuff goes wrong like that it kind of just effects my enjoyment of a shoot and the pictures that come from it.I like them. I'm not as keen on blue-lit shots as I am on the others, but they're neat. Love the way her rings pop in the B&W shots and I think DSC_1810 is cracking - I like the way her eyes are swallowed up by the shadow, with the catch lights just picking them out.
I'd be happy coming away with a set of shots like that!
Than you, I think half of my problem was that she was 5 hours late and the whole thing wrecked my entire day and part of my Sunday in the process. I guess when stuff goes wrong like that it kind of just effects my enjoyment of a shoot and the pictures that come from it.
Yeah this still happens to me as well. Especially on my 810. I'm still trying to figure the shutter speed sweet spot on this thing, that and sometimes I'm at a dumb shutter speed in the studio. People say 1/60th is fine, but not on the 810 with no stabilization, I don't think I found consistent keepers till I got to 1/160th. Just depends. I think these days I try to not really sort through stuff till the next day.Ooof! Yeah, I can see why that would sour you on the photos that came out of it. Perhaps popping them in the metaphorical drawer for a week or two will help? I tend to find myself coming back from shooting really happy with the photos having reviewed them on the back of the camera, then brought down when I review them on a big screen ("Oh, no I missed focus! Crap, I botched the framing on this one! What was I thinking!" etc.) to pick out the keepers and it's sometimes only after a week or two (and going to shoot something else) that I'm able to come to them clean.
Yeah this still happens to me as well. Especially on my 810. I'm still trying to figure the shutter speed sweet spot on this thing, that and sometimes I'm at a dumb shutter speed in the studio. People say 1/60th is fine, but not on the 810 with no stabilization, I don't think I found consistent keepers till I got to 1/160th. Just depends. I think these days I try to not really sort through stuff till the next day.
Yeah aviation and wildlife is pretty much long glass territory. I'm always curious about what lens to buy next and I'm always like...what the fuck am I even going to do with it and just don't even bother. I kind of am in "if it ain't broke don't fix it" territory. Like what am I going to do with a 200-500?Yeah, it's probably the best way to handle it. Most of my stuff tends to be outdoors, and over the next year it's likely to be at day-long events so I have an excuse for getting in and sticking the gear in the corner and not looking at them until the next day
re: Shutter speed. Aviation photography is absolutely unforgiving with regard to shutter/aperture/ISO and technique and it's been a real learning curve for me. For fast jets, you want the shutter speed high - you're talking at least 1/1000 if you're not panning for effect - but you're also looking for nailing focus and good depth of field so you can't shoot wide open, but those two factors mean using low ISO is difficult on all but the brightest days... and bright days often means flat light, which isn't great for the subject! Prop planes kinda reverse that - you want the shutter speed down to 1/60s-1/125 and low ISO with a really narrow aperture (f16-f22) - so you can get good prop blur and the sense of motion that prop planes and helicopters need to not look like they're hanging in mid-air, but as even a prop plane moves pretty sharpish you're going to be shooting handheld (or if you're lucky on a monopod or high-end tripod) which - even with IS - is not easy!
There are few types of photography that demand high-end kit, but aviation photography - at the enthusiastic amateur level and up - is definitely one where the kind of glass you're using will determine what kind of shots are possible (unless you have an in to an airport or military base, in which case you can get some amazing shots with just about anything because you have the proximity to the subject).
Yeah aviation and wildlife is pretty much long glass territory. I'm always curious about what lens to buy next and I'm always like...what the fuck am I even going to do with it and just don't even bother. I kind of am in "if it ain't broke don't fix it" territory. Like what am I going to do with a 200-500?
No kidding...I do my best to get paid stuff, but it's not exactly easy. I think I turned someone off cause they asked if I did TFP and my response was you asked to work with me so I'm going to charge you something. If you like my work and want me to work with you then yeah I'm going to charge you.Heh. I've got my eye on a 150-600mm lens, but even that "budget" long lens is £1,000+, and at that price you have to start getting serious about trying to make money out of what you do (unless you're an amateur with deeeeep pockets, dropping four figures on one lens is not "this is a hobby" territory)
Congrats on the job. The business side is very important as well.What up guys, long time no see. Glad everyone is still putting out quality stuff.
I don't think I've contributed yet in 2017, though I've been out with my camera a few times. I mentioned at the tail end of 2016 I got offered a job at a photo studio in Shanghai, after a few other interviews and meeting them in person they ended up wanting me for business development in their head office. So I'm not really shooting much at all, but learning a lot about the business side of things, especially as it pertains to wedding photography in Asia. Turns out the studio I was offered a job at is just one of our over 100 stores across China, Korea and Malaysia. And we are expanding into other markets, hopefully the USA/Canada even this year.
Not sure why I'm telling ya'll this except that most of us have been around these GAF photo threads for a few years at least, so kind of feels like a community within the community... also in case anyone is looking for a job as a photographer shooting engagement photos in Asia hit me up. Pay isn't great starting out (around 30k USD) but you can live a pretty good life out here anyway if you are interested in giving it a go. If we do get a store up and going in LA or Vancouver this year I'll let you guys know.
Also, I'll contribute some photos I took recently next time I leave mainland China, VPN and flickr are refusing to play nice.
Congrats on the job. The business side is very important as well.
What up guys, long time no see. Glad everyone is still putting out quality stuff.
I don't think I've contributed yet in 2017, though I've been out with my camera a few times. I mentioned at the tail end of 2016 I got offered a job at a photo studio in Shanghai, after a few other interviews and meeting them in person they ended up wanting me for business development in their head office. So I'm not really shooting much at all, but learning a lot about the business side of things, especially as it pertains to wedding photography in Asia. Turns out the studio I was offered a job at is just one of our over 100 stores across China, Korea and Malaysia. And we are expanding into other markets, hopefully the USA/Canada even this year.
Not sure why I'm telling ya'll this except that most of us have been around these GAF photo threads for a few years at least, so kind of feels like a community within the community... also in case anyone is looking for a job as a photographer shooting engagement photos in Asia hit me up. Pay isn't great starting out (around 30k USD) but you can live a pretty good life out here anyway if you are interested in giving it a go. If we do get a store up and going in LA or Vancouver this year I'll let you guys know.
Also, I'll contribute some photos I took recently next time I leave mainland China, VPN and flickr are refusing to play nice.
Congrats man!
Do y'all have anything going on in the Philippines?
I currently live in Texas but was born and raised over there but I'd love to move back over there for a few years to experience it as an adult.
Truth be told I'm looking for some kind of escape here... not that I hate my fam or anything crazy like that, it just feels like opportunities here are drying up and being in my mid-20's I feel like I should take the opportunity now while I'm not locked down and go for an adventure while I still can.
I'm doing some research into the Philippines but right now it doesn't look like a great market for us. We will see what happens, but currently leaning towards more studios in Malaysia and one in SG, plus the aforementioned North American markets. I'll keep you posted. At our mainland china stores we have a lot of Indonesian and Filipino photographers, and we are looking for more. Americans too. Anyone really lol. Our head photographer at our flagship store is a French guy.
The website of our primary brand is here: www.artiz.com.cn
If anyone is interested. It's in Chinese but there are photos duh.
I see. I'm actually not surprised the market in the Philippines isn't that great. I was there in 2012 for my brothers wedding and the crew they hired produces some really good shit so there's not really a lack of photo or videographers there.
Honestly the language barrier is what I'm concerned about. I'm actually looking into teaching English in Korea or China as other opportunities that I could do and yep, the language barrier is my issue. I mean I've been listening to K-Pop for 6 years or so now and I only know a few words haha. Granted I listen for the music not the lyrics but that's for another topic.
Anyway, looked at the website... damn, I wish I can shoot like that. That's some gorgeous photography right there.
These are pretty good. I like the lighting in the second on the most.Something I shot over the weekend
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https://500px.com/photo/197490161/kath1-by-samuel-vasquez
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https://500px.com/photo/197490163/katherine-bw-by-samuel-vasquez
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https://500px.com/photo/197490165/katherine-white-by-samuel-vasquez
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These are pretty good. I like the lighting in the second on the most.
Probably, might also depend on the bit rate or something. I think if I do 16 bit Tiffs on my 45mb raws uncropped they end up being 256mb's. I can uncompress my raws on my D810 and get them to the size of that PNG.Question: I exported a RAW image in Pixelmator that was 19.7mb into PNG and it became 75.9mb. Is that normal? How do you guys normally convert RAWs for online use or sending to other people?
Question: I exported a RAW image in Pixelmator that was 19.7mb into PNG and it became 75.9mb. Is that normal? How do you guys normally convert RAWs for online use or sending to other people?
Just warning you now teleconverters cut maximum aperture in half. Not to mention a lot of birders use crop sensor cameras.
Just warning you now teleconverters cut maximum aperture in half. Not to mention a lot of birders use crop sensor cameras.
Talk to Cosmonaut X about the aviation stuff cause that stuff is tricky to get right, at some point you'd probably need a VR lens.Yeah, I sorta read up on it a little bit and it seems like I'd need an f/2.8 which is perfect coz my 70-210 is f/2.8 and IIRC, that ends up as f/5.6 right with a 2x teleconverter right?
Anyway, I'm not really interested in bird photography tbh. I'm actually wanting to do aviation photography instead... I found out that the Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport has a park on it's outskirts that has an area for those wanting to do aviation photography. I'm probably gonna start going there once or twice a month once I have a teleconverter, I'm just testing out my gear for now lol.
February 14
Talk to Cosmonaut X about the aviation stuff cause that stuff is tricky to get right, at some point you'd probably need a VR lens.
Yup, definitely if you're looking to shoot prop aircraft/helicopters - or to get nice panning shots of other aircraft. It's a challenging branch of photography but very rewarding. Feel free to give me a shout on here if there's ever anything I can help with - I should be heading to my local militry base soon to shoot some of the local aircraft, and I'm hoping to land a visit on the base itself next month, so I'll be posting more aviation stuff here sometime soon.
Awesome!
I'll probably pick up a cheap teleconverter for the moment and figure out how things work before I get really into it. I'll shoot you a PM once I've hit a roadblock or something lol.
you could but you'll probably be left wanting. 300mm is the absolute minimum you need for birds, even then you're going to be cropping and or using a TC. Hell, i still crop with a 1.5x crop camera and a 500mm lens with a 1.4TC. this translates roughly to 1000mm of angle of view.
Just warning you now teleconverters cut maximum aperture in half. Not to mention a lot of birders use crop sensor cameras.
you could but you'll probably be left wanting. 300mm is the absolute minimum you need for birds, even then you're going to be cropping and or using a TC. Hell, i still crop with a 1.5x crop camera and a 500mm lens with a 1.4TC. this translates roughly to 1000mm of angle of view.
Yeah it really does depend on the teleconverter you're putting on, I think I just made a flub by generalizing too much. I'm never in the mood for camera math. Your set up is...some heavy reach and you're still cropping, damn.you could but you'll probably be left wanting. 300mm is the absolute minimum you need for birds, even then you're going to be cropping and or using a TC. Hell, i still crop with a 1.5x crop camera and a 500mm lens with a 1.4TC. this translates roughly to 1000mm of angle of view.
they don't cut it in half. It depends on the type, there are 1.4x 1.7x and 2.0x each with their own penalties.
My birthday was last week so I bought a thing.
Freeze your hands off like a man and take pics now. I mean I get it, but just limit the amount of time spend out there and still take pictures.You guys are great photographers. Just got the Sony A6500 (with a selp18105g lens) loving it so so very much. With the warmer weather coming I'm excited about taking some more pics with it. My previous camera was the Canon rebel T5.
I became a little frustrated that the Sony playmemories app didn't transfer full sized images, but realize it doesn't send raw files. Jpeg works. So if you have a Sony A5100/6000 line phone this is a solution.
Flickr page: Crazyorloco
instagram: Grr8jon - Mainly has Iphone 7 plus pics.
you could but you'll probably be left wanting. 300mm is the absolute minimum you need for birds, even then you're going to be cropping and or using a TC. Hell, i still crop with a 1.5x crop camera and a 500mm lens with a 1.4TC. this translates roughly to 1000mm of angle of view.
I started shooting planes at the local RAF base with my Nikon J2 and a 30-110 lens before I upgraded to my current rig, so you can start with just about anything! You might not get the reach you want at first, but if you find the best spots for close access you can still get some cracking shots even with a shorter lens and a smaller body. If you want to start submitting shots to the big plane spotting/logging sites then you might have to think about higher-end kit and long lenses because they're looking for very specific types of shot and have very stringent quality requirements, but if you're looking at this as a fun type of photography to get into then don't worry about the kit as much just now.
Another tip is to look for local airports/military bases offering open days or photoshoots, as they will get you really close to the aircraft and give you a chance to get something that photographers outside the wire won't. Airshows are good too, as you often get static displays and you can get some cracking close-up shots of the aircraft, though displays really require a longer lens (nothing stopping you hiring one for the day, though...)