malcolmclarke
FollowAirbourne, Eastbourne 2015. The Breitling Wing Walkers gave a wonderful demonstration, and although a long telephoto lens was required I was pleased at the res...
Read more
Airbourne, Eastbourne 2015. The Breitling Wing Walkers gave a wonderful demonstration, and although a long telephoto lens was required I was pleased at the result of this shot.
Read less
Read less
Views
1895
Likes
Awards
Creative Winter Award
Curator's Selection
Top Shot Award 21
Member Selection Award
Featured
Contest Finalist in Two Of The Same Photo Contest
Peer Award
Superb Composition
Absolute Masterpiece
Top Choice
Outstanding Creativity
Magnificent Capture
All Star
Genius
Top Ranks
Categories
elliejforbayjohnson
September 28, 2017
Fab pics.i got some fab shots at the Red bull festival in Poland 2014.shall share soon.
Same photographer See allBehind The Lens
Discover more photos See all
Behind The Lens
Location
This was taken at the Eastbourne Airshow (Airbourne) in 2015.Time
The air displays take place in the afternoon, and this one must have been around 3 pm.Lighting
Afternoon sunshine.Equipment
My camera was an Olympus E-500, fitted with an Olympus Digital 40-150mm lens.Inspiration
It was one of a number taken on the day, and in this case the inspiration was the angle after the display team had passed and were starting to bank for a return flypast.Editing
The original photograph had a large amount of sky, so was cropped using Corel Paintshop Pro. I also sharpened it slightly and increased the vibrancy.In my camera bag
My camera is an Olympus E-500. I carry three lenses - Olympus Zuikko Digital 14-45mm, Olympus Zuiko digital 40-150mm (which is the one I carry fitted), and an Olympus Zuiko Digital 70-300mm. There is also an Olympus Electronic Flash FL-36R but I hardly use it, since I lost the handbook and can't really figure out how to get the best from it! I find the on-camera flash is adequate for most things, augmented by post production.Feedback
At events like this I take a lot of photographs, often with the subject so far away that it can only form a relatively small part of the image. I set the camera to a sport setting, which gives me multiple exposures so that I can track the subject.I also have to work hard on breathing (my technique is one deep breath in and out, a second deep breath with a brief pause after half-exhaling during which I click and go - sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't). I am very much an amateur who is beginning to find that other people like what I have captured, and this has prompted me to click away to build experience and portfolio. It is better to have a lot of shots to chose from and then discard a lot (a benefit of digital photography) than to miss or mess the crucial shot.