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Zalllon Registered: Jun 05, 2005 Total Posts: 181 Country: Canada |
Hi all, |
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scott shoemake Registered: Apr 21, 2007 Total Posts: 859 Country: United States |
Wear layers of clothes. See if you can get a snowmobile ride up to the course/pipe. Bring food and water. Something to sit/put your knees on. If you're shooting a lot of one jump, throw a strobe and a PW on it. Try not to just get "guy in the sky" images, get some takeoff, landing, in other words show a good perspective. Get some lifestyle shots of the riders chillin' and being thuggish. White balance every time you move. Any other q's PM me, I do quite a few snow stuff every year. |
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nick pro Registered: Dec 15, 2007 Total Posts: 231 Country: United States |
Yeah, pretty much what scott said. |
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Zalllon Registered: Jun 05, 2005 Total Posts: 181 Country: Canada |
Thanks scott, I've been told that I am getting a ride to each allowable location. And good call on the off camera strobe, I didn't think of that. The candid shot thing is good too. That's some great advice, thx ... much appreciated. |
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scott shoemake Registered: Apr 21, 2007 Total Posts: 859 Country: United States |
Dude, uggs rock....i'm completely married to a woman and have kids too. haha, not gay at all. they are a burly boot for snow, i've been out some nights and my feet were sweating. You can get em pretty cheap too. |
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DannyG Registered: Jan 02, 2008 Total Posts: 373 Country: United States |
You will quickly find that all that snow will make your shots underexposed. Turn up the exposure comp a stop or two as needed. If the weather REALLY gets nasty-cold, heat packs for your batteries will keep them happy. Sounds like fun. |