Here is my attempt at the challenge. I’ve meet all criteria except I think part of the exercise was for us to get well planned and executed shots, which these are not. They are all taken within the time limit though and even though they are all of the same group of wildflowers, each one is a different approach.
#1. 6:56:52 PM: The context shot. Oh look a daisy and some railway ties, maybe I can do something with this. Nope guess not. Too green too busy, and needs a lot of tidying up
#2. 7:00:48 PM: After a quick clean up of some of the dead leaves and other debris, found a place to sit down and tried a close up. Did some test shots to get rid of blinkies, had to dial in -1 1/3 EC. OK, looks good, take the shot. Oops – too close, right at the end of the focal distance and the only thing in focus is the flower which appears to be floating without a stem. Not what I wanted.
#3.7:03:34 PM: Lets zoom out a bit and get a group shot. Focus on the single flower, aperture wide open shutter, speed acceptable, still need negative EC or I get the blinkies, only -2/3 though. Ready, Set, Shoot. Yeah, I like this one. Still not all that sharp, but hey, I’m used to that. In this case besides camera shake there is a lot of wind. My shoulders and arms are getting sore from waiting for it to die down so I think this is the best it will be.
#4. 7:06:58 PM: Now for something totally different. I really like those shots that look like vertical pans of a still subject, usually trees or anything with strong vertical lines. You know the ones I mean. I think Rob has posted a few here. Let’s give it a try. Nope, the lines are not strong enough. I don’t think this works even as an abstract. It was worth a try though. I think I’ll try this with the tripod and something with really strong vertical lines and a clean background without any horizontal debris to interfere.
5. 7:07:47 PM: Well, the wind is not going to quit, so let’s try to take advantage and maybe get a movement shot for the themed competition. Decrease Aperture; Decrease ISO, to get lowest shutter speed possible. Wait for wind... waiting, waiting...there it is – Click... , not so hot. Maybe this could stand a tripod too so the only movement is from the wind. Also I could put the polarizing filter back to slow shutter speed even more. Guess it’s back to the drawing board on this one too.
Well there you go, that is a typical photo shoot for me. C&C welcome. Don’t say slow down though. This is my style right now. Go for a walk, take camera and shoot anything that looks interesting. Try to learn something each time out, but don't stress over perfection. NOT YET anyway, maybe next year.
Have a good weekend everyone
Wendy