Nearly all people wade through their lives zooming, then taking a photo. These poor, poor souls. For this week’s Shooting Challenge , you would zoom whilst taking a picture.
The Challenge
Take a photo while zooming your lens in or out, like our lead shot by Shayne Kaye .
The Method
There’s one main trick to this methodology in the event you’re in search of a clean zoom. Start the zooming process before clicking the shutter. Then continue zooming until the shutter closes.
Got it? Zoom. Take photo. Finish taking photo. Finish zooming.
Now, that’s just the elemental idea, and it’ll even work to a degree in full auto mode. So we can tinker further, Adorama has some excellent tips , suggesting that you just close down your aperture (select the best f-stop possible) to lengthen the prospective time for exposure, enhancing the zoom effect. They even recommend a neutral density filter, which just cuts the total light entering your lens, to extend exposure even further. With more exposure time, you can too experiment with stopping or starting the zoom halfway through, or whatever that’s that youngsters are doing this present day.
If you’re using some extent and shoot, you can be out of luck this week.
The Rules – READ THESE
1. Submissions should be your individual.
2. Photos ought to be taken since this contest was announced.
3. Explain, briefly, the equipment, settings, technique and story behind shot.
4. Email submissions to contests@gizmodo.com, not me.
5. Include 800px wide image (200KB or less) AND a 2560×1600 sized in email. I know that your photo might not fall into those exact high rez dimensions, so whatever native resolution you’re using is okay.
6. One submission per person.
7. Use the correct SUBJECT line for your email (more info on that below)
Send your best photo by Monday, December 6th at 8AM Eastern to contests@gizmodo.com with ” Zoom” within the subject line. Save your files as JPGs, and use a FirstnameLastnameZoom.jpg (800px wide) and FirstnameLastnameZoomWallpaper.jpg (2560px wide) naming conventions. Include your shooting summary (camera, lens, ISO, etc) within the body of the email together with a story of the shot in several sentences. And don’t skip this story part because it’s often essentially the mostsome of the most enjoyable part for us all beyond the shot itself!
If you haven’t stopped by my site Life, Panoramic yet, well, you’ve probably made up your mind not to. And for that, I will be able to only respect your conviction, notwithstanding we’re featuring photos of Prague today.
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