i specifically didnt want to use a flash - that was the whole point. it does
take a little practice, maybe next time i'll be more successful.

arnie

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "John Francis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, February 08, 2004 8:05 PM
Subject: Re: taxi in motion


> >
> > so a while back there was a discussion about photographing vehicles
while
> > they are travelling. this is my attempt with some taxi's driving past my
> > apartment building. pictures made with ist D and tokina 28-70 atx pro at
> > 70mm. because it was dark, the exposure was around 1/4 second and f2.8
iso
> > 800. out of 50 picture these are the only four even remotely useful.
> >
> > pictures resized to 600x401 but not cropped or otherwise modified.
> >
> > http://www.xdstech.com/istd/tim/taxi1.jpg (50 kb)
> > http://www.xdstech.com/istd/tim/taxi2.jpg (40 kb)
> > http://www.xdstech.com/istd/tim/taxi3.jpg (48 kb)
> > http://www.xdstech.com/istd/tim/other1.jpg (68 kb)
> >
> > let me know what you think, but keep in mind that tracking a car moving
at
> > 30 mph from 25 feet away for a 1/4 of a second is not hard.
>
> It depends on what your criteria are for success, I guess.
> If all you want is a fairly good outline of the car, then no - it isn't
> all that hard.  But if you want the result sharp enough to read *all* the
> lettering on the side of the car (not just the large print) then it's a
> great deal harder!
>
> (A good trick in a situation like this is to use flash - second-curtain
> sync would be my choice - to freeze the car at the end of the exposure.
> That will give you sharp detail without needing to get the pan spot-on).
>
>


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