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View Full Version : Goodwood Festival of Speed 08 - Panning


jgs001
18-07-2008, 09:39
From the same set of pics over this weekend, first outing with the dSLR and first go at this too.

1) 1/80 f16 ISO200 @100mm (you may have seen the edits on this in another post)
http://i246.photobucket.com/albums/gg118/johns_bucketofphotos/goodwood/IMG_1069-3.jpg

2) 1/80 f16 ISo200 @154mm
http://i246.photobucket.com/albums/gg118/johns_bucketofphotos/goodwood/IMG_1087.jpg

3) 1/60 f14 ISO200 @79mm
http://i246.photobucket.com/albums/gg118/johns_bucketofphotos/goodwood/IMG_1239-1.jpg

4) 1/60 f18 ISO20 @96mm
http://i246.photobucket.com/albums/gg118/johns_bucketofphotos/goodwood/IMG_1819.jpg

5) 1/60 f22 ISO200 @96mm
http://i246.photobucket.com/albums/gg118/johns_bucketofphotos/goodwood/IMG_1822.jpg

6) 1/60 f25 ISO200 @100mm
http://i246.photobucket.com/albums/gg118/johns_bucketofphotos/goodwood/IMG_1837.jpg

Thanks for looking, C&C and suggestions for improvements welcome.

Matt Sayle
18-07-2008, 09:41
These are great. Really really good. You havnt fallen into the 'using a high shutter speed' trap. You have clean backgrounds. Only niggle is the people in the foreground but thats being picky. Fantastic shots.

jgs001
18-07-2008, 09:53
Thanks very much Matt. I took notes of your's and others posts on here about catching speeding cars before I went. I experimented with the shutter speed, and even tried a few at 1/50, but it became harder to seperate the car from the blurred background :D (I just can't manage panning at 1/50). Just wish I'd seen CT's tutorial first though, probably wouldn't have ended up with quite so many that ended up in the bin)

Matt Sayle
18-07-2008, 09:54
I find it difficult at 1/100 :lol: Hopefully a DSLR will help my panning!!

jgs001
18-07-2008, 16:54
Good luck getting a dSLR Matt.

Lev67
18-07-2008, 17:13
The 1st pic is superb, the others are great too.. What about larger size image 800x???

ps wheres CT's tutorial ?

jgs001
18-07-2008, 17:30
Neil, I'll sort that out, sorry, I got a tiddly monitor I'm working on, and use that as the basis for the sizing... The tutorial is here (http://www.talkphotography.co.uk/forums/showthread.php?t=8216)