Sunday, January 31, 2010
Saturday, January 30, 2010
Friday, January 29, 2010
Thursday, January 28, 2010
photo of the day!
photo of the day!
Go pro Helmet hero HD!
My girlfriend just got me the Go Pro helmet hero HD! WOOT!!! I am going spearfishing in the morning and to ski rixen in the afternoon to test her out.
Here is a little time lapse I just did with the Go Pro tonight...
Thank you so much Adrienne! I love you more than anything.
Here is a little time lapse I just did with the Go Pro tonight...
Thank you so much Adrienne! I love you more than anything.
Go pro Helmet hero HD!
My girlfriend just got me the Go Pro helmet hero HD! WOOT!!! I am going spearfishing in the morning and to ski rixen in the afternoon to test her out.
Here is a little time lapse I just did with the Go Pro tonight...
Thank you so much Adrienne! I love you more than anything.
Here is a little time lapse I just did with the Go Pro tonight...
Thank you so much Adrienne! I love you more than anything.
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Tom Fooshee visits Tampa cable
Tom Fooshee recently took to the cable at Tampa for a Liquid force demo. Tom rode the cable for almost two hours straight! I think my arms would fall off. Check out the full article with lots of pics at Alliance wake.com
Tom Fooshee visits Tampa cable
Tom Fooshee recently took to the cable at Tampa for a Liquid force demo. Tom rode the cable for almost two hours straight! I think my arms would fall off. Check out the full article with lots of pics at Alliance wake.com
Monday, January 25, 2010
Sunday, January 24, 2010
photo of the day!
photo of the day!
Saturday, January 23, 2010
photo of the day!
photo of the day!
Friday, January 22, 2010
photo of the day!
photo of the day!
Thursday, January 21, 2010
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
photo of the day!
photo of the day!
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Monday, January 18, 2010
photo of the day!
photo of the day!
Sunday, January 17, 2010
photo of the day!
Slappa di tail mon! Keaton Bowlby gets rowdy over there on the s2. What he is doing here is a front board to, I guess you could say "tail slap". The "tail slap" looks really good. Seeing in person is the best because you get to hear that "SLAP!" when the tail of the wakeskate hits the rail. The skills of precision and accuracy have to be utilized very well to complete this maneuver.
photo of the day!
Slappa di tail mon! Keaton Bowlby gets rowdy over there on the s2. What he is doing here is a front board to, I guess you could say "tail slap". The "tail slap" looks really good. Seeing in person is the best because you get to hear that "SLAP!" when the tail of the wakeskate hits the rail. The skills of precision and accuracy have to be utilized very well to complete this maneuver.
Beginner photographer Tutorial !
If you just got a camera for Christmas, like a Nikon D3000 D5000 D300s or any Canon's XSI T1I or any other slr. This little tutorial or camera guide might help you and your wakeskating or any other type of photography!
...Well if you are gonna shoot a fast moving action sport make sure you just experiment. Try to keep your shutter speed over 1/500. If you don't, the pictures might be blurry. Do not be afraid to shoot on manual mode either. That is the best way to learn. Don't forget that if you take a bad picture you can look at it and see what you did wrong, fix the problem then just delete the bad photo.
A cool thing you can do is make a shallower depth of field. That is when your focal point is sharp and everything else in front and behind the subject is blurry. The way you do this is by "opening up your aperture" which would mean you are letting more light in. The smaller the number 2.8, 3.2, 3.5, 4 ect would mean the more light you let in. Each of those different numbers is called an "aperture" or "f stop". On some lenses that number can be from 1.2 to 32 or even 64. For each stop down (going to a bigger number, lets say from 2.8 to 3.2) you are letting half as much light in at 3.2 than you are at 2.8. So If you are shooting ANY sport at mid day, and you had your aperture at 2.8, your shutter speed would have to be about 1/4000 of a second. Now lets say you stopped down to 3.2, your shutter speed would only have to be 1/2000 of a second. The only reason you would shoot wakeskating at mid day like that would be to blur the background a lot. During mid day or when I am shooting at the "golden hours" (dawn and dusk), I usually don't use an aperture smaller than an f stop of 4.
Another important technical factor of shooting is your ISO. The lower the number 200, 400, the slower the "film speed", the higher the number, the faster. So during the day or well lit situations you should have your ISO anywhere from 200 to 400. If you are in a low light situations you can bump up your ISO to 800 or 1600 to have more leeway with your shutter speed and aperture to try and freeze the situation.
Hope I helped a little! If you have any specific questions about anything feel free to ask me! Ejazzle44@aol.com
Dang, I totally forgot about all these!
http://www.alliancewake.com/wake/wake-photography-101-2/
read them! It will help a lot more than I did.
...Well if you are gonna shoot a fast moving action sport make sure you just experiment. Try to keep your shutter speed over 1/500. If you don't, the pictures might be blurry. Do not be afraid to shoot on manual mode either. That is the best way to learn. Don't forget that if you take a bad picture you can look at it and see what you did wrong, fix the problem then just delete the bad photo.
A cool thing you can do is make a shallower depth of field. That is when your focal point is sharp and everything else in front and behind the subject is blurry. The way you do this is by "opening up your aperture" which would mean you are letting more light in. The smaller the number 2.8, 3.2, 3.5, 4 ect would mean the more light you let in. Each of those different numbers is called an "aperture" or "f stop". On some lenses that number can be from 1.2 to 32 or even 64. For each stop down (going to a bigger number, lets say from 2.8 to 3.2) you are letting half as much light in at 3.2 than you are at 2.8. So If you are shooting ANY sport at mid day, and you had your aperture at 2.8, your shutter speed would have to be about 1/4000 of a second. Now lets say you stopped down to 3.2, your shutter speed would only have to be 1/2000 of a second. The only reason you would shoot wakeskating at mid day like that would be to blur the background a lot. During mid day or when I am shooting at the "golden hours" (dawn and dusk), I usually don't use an aperture smaller than an f stop of 4.
Another important technical factor of shooting is your ISO. The lower the number 200, 400, the slower the "film speed", the higher the number, the faster. So during the day or well lit situations you should have your ISO anywhere from 200 to 400. If you are in a low light situations you can bump up your ISO to 800 or 1600 to have more leeway with your shutter speed and aperture to try and freeze the situation.
Hope I helped a little! If you have any specific questions about anything feel free to ask me! Ejazzle44@aol.com
Dang, I totally forgot about all these!
http://www.alliancewake.com/wake/wake-photography-101-2/
read them! It will help a lot more than I did.
Beginner photographer Tutorial !
If you just got a camera for Christmas, like a Nikon D3000 D5000 D300s or any Canon's XSI T1I or any other slr. This little tutorial or camera guide might help you and your wakeskating or any other type of photography!
...Well if you are gonna shoot a fast moving action sport make sure you just experiment. Try to keep your shutter speed over 1/500. If you don't, the pictures might be blurry. Do not be afraid to shoot on manual mode either. That is the best way to learn. Don't forget that if you take a bad picture you can look at it and see what you did wrong, fix the problem then just delete the bad photo.
A cool thing you can do is make a shallower depth of field. That is when your focal point is sharp and everything else in front and behind the subject is blurry. The way you do this is by "opening up your aperture" which would mean you are letting more light in. The smaller the number 2.8, 3.2, 3.5, 4 ect would mean the more light you let in. Each of those different numbers is called an "aperture" or "f stop". On some lenses that number can be from 1.2 to 32 or even 64. For each stop down (going to a bigger number, lets say from 2.8 to 3.2) you are letting half as much light in at 3.2 than you are at 2.8. So If you are shooting ANY sport at mid day, and you had your aperture at 2.8, your shutter speed would have to be about 1/4000 of a second. Now lets say you stopped down to 3.2, your shutter speed would only have to be 1/2000 of a second. The only reason you would shoot wakeskating at mid day like that would be to blur the background a lot. During mid day or when I am shooting at the "golden hours" (dawn and dusk), I usually don't use an aperture smaller than an f stop of 4.
Another important technical factor of shooting is your ISO. The lower the number 200, 400, the slower the "film speed", the higher the number, the faster. So during the day or well lit situations you should have your ISO anywhere from 200 to 400. If you are in a low light situations you can bump up your ISO to 800 or 1600 to have more leeway with your shutter speed and aperture to try and freeze the situation.
Hope I helped a little! If you have any specific questions about anything feel free to ask me! Ejazzle44@aol.com
Dang, I totally forgot about all these!
http://www.alliancewake.com/wake/wake-photography-101-2/
read them! It will help a lot more than I did.
...Well if you are gonna shoot a fast moving action sport make sure you just experiment. Try to keep your shutter speed over 1/500. If you don't, the pictures might be blurry. Do not be afraid to shoot on manual mode either. That is the best way to learn. Don't forget that if you take a bad picture you can look at it and see what you did wrong, fix the problem then just delete the bad photo.
A cool thing you can do is make a shallower depth of field. That is when your focal point is sharp and everything else in front and behind the subject is blurry. The way you do this is by "opening up your aperture" which would mean you are letting more light in. The smaller the number 2.8, 3.2, 3.5, 4 ect would mean the more light you let in. Each of those different numbers is called an "aperture" or "f stop". On some lenses that number can be from 1.2 to 32 or even 64. For each stop down (going to a bigger number, lets say from 2.8 to 3.2) you are letting half as much light in at 3.2 than you are at 2.8. So If you are shooting ANY sport at mid day, and you had your aperture at 2.8, your shutter speed would have to be about 1/4000 of a second. Now lets say you stopped down to 3.2, your shutter speed would only have to be 1/2000 of a second. The only reason you would shoot wakeskating at mid day like that would be to blur the background a lot. During mid day or when I am shooting at the "golden hours" (dawn and dusk), I usually don't use an aperture smaller than an f stop of 4.
Another important technical factor of shooting is your ISO. The lower the number 200, 400, the slower the "film speed", the higher the number, the faster. So during the day or well lit situations you should have your ISO anywhere from 200 to 400. If you are in a low light situations you can bump up your ISO to 800 or 1600 to have more leeway with your shutter speed and aperture to try and freeze the situation.
Hope I helped a little! If you have any specific questions about anything feel free to ask me! Ejazzle44@aol.com
Dang, I totally forgot about all these!
http://www.alliancewake.com/wake/wake-photography-101-2/
read them! It will help a lot more than I did.
Saturday, January 16, 2010
photo of the day!
photo of the day!
Friday, January 15, 2010
Thursday, January 14, 2010
photo of the day!
Shooting long exposures on the pier at night was something I had yet to try. It was 4o degrees out with 10 to 15 mph winds. The weather was chilly to say the lease. With my remote shutter release in one hand and hot chocolate in the other, I managed to snap this 736 second exposure of the Juno beach pier with the cities of Jupiter and Tequesta in the background. This was my first time using the 10.5mm fish eye for long exposures. It really gave an even better effect than what I was hoping for!
Enjoy!
Send me an email at Ejazzle44@aol.com if you would like the picture larger for your desktop.
photo of the day!
Shooting long exposures on the pier at night was something I had yet to try. It was 4o degrees out with 10 to 15 mph winds. The weather was chilly to say the lease. With my remote shutter release in one hand and hot chocolate in the other, I managed to snap this 736 second exposure of the Juno beach pier with the cities of Jupiter and Tequesta in the background. This was my first time using the 10.5mm fish eye for long exposures. It really gave an even better effect than what I was hoping for!
Enjoy!
Send me an email at Ejazzle44@aol.com if you would like the picture larger for your desktop.
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
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