boutte
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Need a lil advice....I was asked to take the team pictures for my son's high school baseball team. I shot action photos last year for the team & made a few calendars for the players. I've never done anything "professional" before.
I have the gear to pull it off, but I don't want to take the assignment and fail. Any advice, Outlaw? Also, where do you print these if I'm not a pro? Mpix? Adorama? Other?
Any advice would be appreciated.
Random request. And some probably already exists somewhere but this is an awfully long thread to sift through. I'm looking for a photo(s) that someone would be willing to send me the high res for, that exemplifies NOLA that I cold blow up, frame and hang in my living room. I'd also print them in black and white (to go with my theme) if that was not their original
I know - this is vague. I'm just doing a little redecorating in the living room and I already have some Jazzfest posters framed in my dining room and some sepia toned photos of some iconic New Orleans things (street car, cathedral, etc) taken at night so want to keep with the NOLA theme throughout. I've been looking online for some stuff but nothing has really stood out. Feel free to PM me if you can help a girl out.
Took these last week while on Vancouver Island. These whales belong to local resident J-Pod and we followed them along the U.S./Canadian border at Boundary Pass between S. Pender Island (CA) and Stuart Island (US). Took a little over 600 shots but sadly these are the best. We were in a little zodiac boat so when using a zoom lens the wave action is greatly amplified. I took a lot of pictures of open water lol. Will post some more in the coming days including a few from Olympic National Park.
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I understand your pain! I visited the San Juan Islands last summer and did a fast boat tour out of Friday Harbor. We saw killer whales (don't remember which pod it was) and a couple of humpbacks. If you go back to Page 123 of this thread, you'll see some of the whale pictures I got. I had a very large and heavy zoom that I had rented and ended up with about 1500 shots. Of that, maybe 50-100 had a desirable image. I ended up just setting my camera on continuous high and shot as much as I could as the boat rocked. I usually started off the target, got a couple of the whale and then moved back off target. It was kind of fun but also frustrating. The "Spray and Pray" version of photography doesn't leave you feeling like much of a photographer.