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7 on 7 at Reliant
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Here's a few.
1. Shoot with the sun. The players faces won't be in the shadows. Move to the other sideline if you have to.
2. If you want pics of the receivers, try to shoot from slightly behind the line of scrimmage. That way you will get their faces in the shots rather than their backs.
3. For defensive shots, stay well behind the line. You'll get photos of the defense coming through the offensive line.
4. The big thing with any sport is anticipating what may happen on the next play and being in position and ready for the shot.
5. As far as camera settings, shoot aperture priority, with your lens wide open. Check to make sure your shutter speed is at least 1/1000th. If it's not, bump your ISO up until it is. Continuous focus, and shoot at the fastest frame rate that your camera allows. I use the same technique for shooting under the lights as well.
You have some good shots there. Keep shooting.Last edited by scotty; 05-20-2012, 02:16 PM.
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Originally posted by scotty View PostHere's a few.
1. Shoot with the sun. The players faces won't be in the shadows. Move to the other sideline if you have to.
2. If you want pics of the receivers, try to shoot from slightly behind the line of scrimmage. That way you will get their faces in the shots rather than their backs.
3. For defensive shots, stay well behind the line. You'll get photos of the defense coming through the offensive line.
4. The big thing with any sport is anticipating what may happen on the next play and being in position and ready for the shot.
5. As far as camera settings, shoot aperture priority, with your lens wide open. Check to make sure your shutter speed is at least 1/1000th. If it's not, bump your ISO up until it is. Continuous focus, and shoot at the fastest frame rate that your camera allows. I use the same technique for shooting under the lights as well.
You have some good shots there. Keep shooting.
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Not to horn toot, but if you want to see a little of my sports work, click the link below the pic.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/jscottcasey/
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Originally posted by scotty View PostHere's a few.
1. Shoot with the sun. The players faces won't be in the shadows. Move to the other sideline if you have to.
2. If you want pics of the receivers, try to shoot from slightly behind the line of scrimmage. That way you will get their faces in the shots rather than their backs.
3. For defensive shots, stay well behind the line. You'll get photos of the defense coming through the offensive line.
4. The big thing with any sport is anticipating what may happen on the next play and being in position and ready for the shot.
5. As far as camera settings, shoot aperture priority, with your lens wide open. Check to make sure your shutter speed is at least 1/1000th. If it's not, bump your ISO up until it is. Continuous focus, and shoot at the fastest frame rate that your camera allows. I use the same technique for shooting under the lights as well.
You have some good shots there. Keep shooting.
I would also add in addition to Scotty's #5 above, shoot at F2.8 (I am assuming you have a 70-200 2.8 or something like it). With the compression of shooting at the upper end of the zoom scale, you are going to have plenty of depth of field for what you are shooting. Shooting at a wide open aperature, this will also help get your shutter speed up to at least 1/1000th of a second as Scotty recommends. Outdoors, you should easily be able to attain this using ISO400 and more than likely down to ISO200 depending on the degree of sun.
Sports/Action is a lot of fun to shoot so have fun with it and burn up the shutter!
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