I have very much enjoyed seeing some pylon work this year, though we still have not seen the rest Of Connor's shoot -- (hint hint). There is a lot of good stuff there (from a photographic perspective). Add in Bill Pearce and Kenn's work from the end of the ramp and we have pretty good coverage of the event, just from the four serious guys that are posting stuff here.
What I am not seeing much of, though, is excitement and a feeling of motion and speed. Much of what I'm seeing could have been done at a good air show. Part of the issue, I think, is that guys like Will and Connor are not cropping enough by my standards. I like closeups, motion, and even sometimes eye contact. I love the feeling that the pilot is looking at me as he goes by. Obviously he's actually looking at the pylon and the racing line, but I still love the illusion.
Equipment these days is so good that you can do shockingly deep crops and still get a great looking internet image. Some of these will not make a great 11x14 print, but nobody out there is buying 11x14 prints anyway, so if the image works for internet usage I don't care at all.
For photogeeks this was done with an older Nikon 300mm and a teleconverter. Teleconverters do cause some image degredation, but not nearly as much as internet denizens will make you think. My criterion was always to have equipment that is better than I am. I could never do stuff as sharp as this consistently, but getting shots like this always reassured me that any image problems were my fault because the lens would clearly do its part if I just did my part right. A good teleconverter on a great prime lens always did fine for me...
Neal
What I am not seeing much of, though, is excitement and a feeling of motion and speed. Much of what I'm seeing could have been done at a good air show. Part of the issue, I think, is that guys like Will and Connor are not cropping enough by my standards. I like closeups, motion, and even sometimes eye contact. I love the feeling that the pilot is looking at me as he goes by. Obviously he's actually looking at the pylon and the racing line, but I still love the illusion.
Equipment these days is so good that you can do shockingly deep crops and still get a great looking internet image. Some of these will not make a great 11x14 print, but nobody out there is buying 11x14 prints anyway, so if the image works for internet usage I don't care at all.
For photogeeks this was done with an older Nikon 300mm and a teleconverter. Teleconverters do cause some image degredation, but not nearly as much as internet denizens will make you think. My criterion was always to have equipment that is better than I am. I could never do stuff as sharp as this consistently, but getting shots like this always reassured me that any image problems were my fault because the lens would clearly do its part if I just did my part right. A good teleconverter on a great prime lens always did fine for me...
Neal
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