Nice, Thierry. Why do the put pads on the backs of the front legs? It looks like the front of the leg might need protection. Just curious.
Another magnificent horse-jumping set, Thierry. Always a pleasure to look at.
#3, #3, #3.
I just think No 1 looks a bit odd, and No 2 well. Got the top shop with #3 though.
The legs at the back, it is a bit hard to explain but they have giant thighs and tiny feet. They are a bit overexposed but the girl is definitely in range.
I will think #3 is the winner here and #2 close but blown.
Hi Thierry,
My wife asked if you were one of those photographers that just sets up the (remote) cameras on a tripods in front of the jumps? (something she possibly thinks takes less skill, although I'm not so sure)
I see these were shot at 200, 85 and 50mm, which did have me wondering if you had 3 bodies (all 7D ) for the three fast primes
My reasoning is that I am "greedy" and trying to cover many of the jumps from one location with a slow zoom, I'll get mediocre images. Instead, I should walk around the ring and get a spot beside just the one jump at a distance that suits the focal length of the fastest prime lenses I have, then I (we all) too might begin to approach these (excellent, as ever) results.
So, who is correct?
Excellent captures...
Hi Dave,
Interesting question. This jumping field has quite the size of a football field. I take the time to watch the way that they follow between the different fences. Considering fence structure, trajectory between fences, I chose a position anf Finally I chose my lens. Fixed focal produces better quality pictures as you know. I shoot 5 to 10 competitors and I move to an other fence. I do not use any tripod.
I hope that I well understood your question and that my answer is clear.