Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/02/12
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]on 2/12/06 6:40 AM, Douglas Herr at telyt@earthlink.net wrote: > on 2/11/06 10:08 PM, Ted Grant at tedgrant@shaw.ca wrote: > >>> Ted, my experience with sports mirrors yours with birds ;-) but for >>> wildlife >>> at least digital capture with fast frame rates has turned technique >>> upside >>> down from where it was just a few years ago. Standard practice is indeed >>> to >>> shoot a burst and pick a good one from the sequence later.<<< >> >> Surely Doug these guys shooting at 8 frames a second aren't getting the >> quality you do? While shooting one frame at a time? The first frame. > > bingo! > Let me expand on this quickie running-out-the-door response. [RANT MODE ON] IMHO there are many parallels between sports photography and wildlife photography, and that as the equipment technology has evolved it has become far easier for the average photographer, or I should say a team of average photographers, to capture the "action" that is prized by editors; it used to be that skill and timing were crucial but when you see at major sporting events a 'shooting gallery' of several dozen big white lenses operated by remote-controlled high frame rate camera bodies tethered to central editing rooms one has to wonder how much skill is involved aside from knowing where to point the camera. Regarding the photo that started this discussion (diver stiking her head on the diving platform), we don't know whether there was a 'shooting gallery' or if this was the work of an individual. If there was a shooting gallery as described above, the odds are that one photo among the dozens made of this particular dive would have captured the moment of impact. If you were to ask me what the chances are of any one photographer (or, any particular camera) capturing that moment I'd tell you the odds were very low. However, in the aggregate the odds that the moment of impact would show up in the editing room were pretty good. It's almost like supplying an infinite number of monkeys with an equally infinite number of word processors except you've improved the odds by adding spell-check software to the word processor. Shooting galleries are found in wildlife photography too. There are numerous 'hot spots' and events that draw photographers shoulder to shoulder with their big white lenses: La Jolla Cove about this time of year, a roadside badger's den I saw in Yelowstone, Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico late in the year, Palo Alto Baylands or Arrowhead Marsh during the winter new moon high tide. Technically the photos that result are good, but when you see the 'take' from the gallery there's a 'same-ness' to them. No one photo, or no single photographer's photos, stand out from the rest. Years ago wildlife photographers' holy grail was photographing birds in flight. AF, Better Beamers, Matrix-metered fill flash, fast frame rates and vibration-reduction technologies have changed all that. Now, nature photography websites are abolutely full of these pictures, and after a while they all look the same aside from the color or shape of the bird: a large bird (easy to track, easy for the AF system to lock onto) centered on the AF sensors, overhead with a plain blue sky (don't want to confuse the AF system with a real background), evenly lit from beneath by the flash system (no icky shadows) with a twinkle in the eye supplied by the flash. The first one was fantastic, the second and third and fourth were kewl but when you've been inundeated by hundreds they're all BORING. It's mass-production photography just as interesting and challenging as the output from the shooting galleries at sporting events. The challenge has become acquiring and programming the equipment. Now before anyone gets his or her shorts in a knot about the 'big white lens' remarks I'm not implying that automaton photography is all they're good for. There are plenty of reasons to choose any particular piece of hardware but it seems like if you're going to do the shooting gallery thing, the auto-everything camera is the one you use to get your pictures into the editing room, and the more picures you supply, the better the odds are that some of your photos will make it out of the editing computers. [RANT MODE OFF] So Ted what I've tried to say in a roundabout way is that in the past a photo like the diver striking her head probably would have been the result of a skilled and knowledgable photographer relying on instinct and timing instead of fast frame rates, the game for the majority of sports photography has changed: the odds of any one phographer capturing the moment of impact were slim, but because of the huge number of photos being made of the event the odds of someone getting the picture are pretty good. Doug Herr Birdman of Sacramento http://www.wildlightphoto.com