My first 6 months of climbing photography
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- Casual Observer
- Posts: 17
- Joined: Mon Mar 08, 2010 12:53 pm
My first 6 months of climbing photography
Hey all,
I started shooting climbing last December 6th when a friend of mine invited me out to photograph him working on Flight of the Challenger at Murrin (in super cold temps). I quickly got hooked on climbing photography and have been out taking climbing pics weather permitting ever since. Now almost 6 months later I edited the photos and threw together an album of the best ones. Hopefully over the summer my shooting skills will get better and I will start pulling off some epic images.
Here's the results of a lot of shutter clicks:
http://outdoors.webshots.com/album/577808655pQWLzP
I started shooting climbing last December 6th when a friend of mine invited me out to photograph him working on Flight of the Challenger at Murrin (in super cold temps). I quickly got hooked on climbing photography and have been out taking climbing pics weather permitting ever since. Now almost 6 months later I edited the photos and threw together an album of the best ones. Hopefully over the summer my shooting skills will get better and I will start pulling off some epic images.
Here's the results of a lot of shutter clicks:
http://outdoors.webshots.com/album/577808655pQWLzP
- thebigchin
- Junior Member
- Posts: 98
- Joined: Tue Jul 26, 2005 8:29 am
- Optimally-Primed
- Senior Member
- Posts: 350
- Joined: Wed Oct 18, 2006 10:04 am
Great shots. Another suggestion: shoot many, show few. A huge part of photography is looking at what you have on your computer and deciding which are the best. My rule of thumb is the assume that people will only remember the least good photo. So take out any photos that you don't want to be the one people remember. Quality over quantity. Rich Wheater's site is a good example.
Great start!
Great start!
I second Jer. WAY too many mediocre shots that crowd out the decent ones. Don't photograph top-roping. Unless you have some kind of serious aesthetic shot (silhouetee, stunnign scenery,e tc), a climber's face is important to include.
Basically, remember this: you are NOT taking photos-- you are making images of memories. Nobody cares what things "actually" look like; they care how cool they look and whether the photo can make you imagine somethign other than what's there.
Basically, remember this: you are NOT taking photos-- you are making images of memories. Nobody cares what things "actually" look like; they care how cool they look and whether the photo can make you imagine somethign other than what's there.
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