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Archive 2013 · Antelope Canyon

  
 
Anzxio
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p.1 #1 · p.1 #1 · Antelope Canyon


I am set to go on a 10am photo tour tomorrow. I know it's going to be insanely busy and difficult to get the best shots, but it's something that has to be done!

Can anyone give advice on settings to be using? I have a 5dmk2 and will use the 17-40L.


Thanks



Jun 10, 2013 at 05:33 PM
ccho
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p.1 #2 · p.1 #2 · Antelope Canyon


I'm sure you probably know this all already, but just in case (assuming everything is shot from tripod):

ISO somewhere between 100-400, lowest possible without ridiculously long exposures to avoid hot pixels
2sec timer or remote release
LiveView to achieve critical focus at 10x
RAW (adjust your WB to your preference later)
Bracket exposures (+/- 1EV should be sufficiently wide)
Av (or M if you want to take into account shutter speed which only really helps with dusty light beams)
CPL filter if you prefer that look

Other tips:
Avoid hotspots (the sky, direct beam of sunlight) unless you're using it for creative effect
Go with the Bigthumb tour (go on a second tour if tomorrow's is not with them) - I went with them March 2012 and they were really helpful with preventing the other tourists from walking into your shots.

Edited on Jun 10, 2013 at 07:25 PM · View previous versions



Jun 10, 2013 at 06:00 PM
JimFox
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p.1 #3 · p.1 #3 · Antelope Canyon


Who are you getting the photo tour with? I would have suggested 11am rather than 10am. The light beams will be best closest to noon.

I would skip the 2 sec release, use a remote release... with the amount of people going through there, you need to take the shot when the coast is clear and you may only have a literal second to shoot. You can't take the chance of waiting for 2 secs and then someone walks into the shot as your self timer is going... On a side note... I don't know if remote releases won't work with Canon cameras, because I have noticed most Canon shooters seem to be alergic to the idea of using a remote release. I personally want total control of when I take a shot, not waiting on a timer.

As to your exposure setting... it all depends on the amount of people and how clear of shots you can get. If getting people out of the shot is difficult, then you can go for a long exposure, 30 to 60 secs so that as they move through the shot the camera won't record them. Or... set your ISO higher, 800 to 1600 and shoot as fast as you can to capture the seconds you have between people walking. Don't forget that sometimes taking 3 or 4 shots of one composition as people walk through will let you stack the shots and then easily layer mask and blend the people out.

As CCHO suggests, Lionel Bigthumb is the best tour to go with. If you don't have him, you ought to what you can to get him.

Also, bring a cloth or bandana, or if you have a rainsleeve for your camera and use it to cover your camera. There can be a lot of dust in there, and lot's of it just falls from the top.

Jim



Jun 10, 2013 at 06:15 PM
Anzxio
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p.1 #4 · p.1 #4 · Antelope Canyon


http://www.navajoantelopecanyon.com/tours.html

Tour 1 is what i'm booked on.



Jun 10, 2013 at 06:18 PM





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