TECH TIP ? TUESDAY: I spend a lot of time flying in small airplanes and helicopters trying to capture fresh perspectives of people and place around the globe. Flying works great for me because my work is all about telling real stories outside the walls of the traditional studio - for some I understand it may be less appealing. Contrary to popular belief you don't need to spend tons of money on special gear or private lessons to look at the world from a birds eye view, but there are some important things to remember. 1) Make some calls to the regional airport close to your location. Tell them you'd like to charter an aerial flight for a photo project. Tell them that you need a sliding or shooting window on the plane to work from. In general a small aircraft will cost $200-$300 'wet'. That means with fuel, pilot, and plane. 2) Talk with your prospective pilot. Ask them how long they've been flying and in what conditions. I only fly with pilots who have several hundred hours of flight time in the type of scenarios I'd like to shoot. This is your life on the line so err on the side of caution. If something feels weird, schedule with someone else. 3) Show up early, and show up with a plan. I tell the pilots exactly where I want to fly and where I'd like the sun to be. Communicate about how you will work together up in the air. 4) Show time! Make sure your batteries are charged and you have big cards in your cameras, nobody wants to change cards mid flight. In tight planes you may not even have that luxury. For camera settings I shoot at 1/1000 of a second or faster and don't worry about fancy gyros or anything. 5) When you are in the air you can control your angles left and right, forward and back, AND up and down (on the ground you don't have his luxury). I use altitude all the time to create depth in my images. I love when some peaks are above the skyline and others are below... but this only happens at certain altitudes. 6) Shoot a lot! Ask the pilot to make banked turns to get the wing and wheels out of the picture. Or use the wings to create more depth to the frame. 7) Have fun! That's what it's all about anyhow right?!! #techtiptuesday #camp4pix

timkempleさん(@timkemple)が投稿した動画 -

ティム・ケンプルのインスタグラム(timkemple) - 11月23日 02時23分


TECH TIP ? TUESDAY: I spend a lot of time flying in small airplanes and helicopters trying to capture fresh perspectives of people and place around the globe.
Flying works great for me because my work is all about telling real stories outside the walls of the traditional studio - for some I understand it may be less appealing.
Contrary to popular belief you don't need to spend tons of money on special gear or private lessons to look at the world from a birds eye view, but there are some important things to remember.
1) Make some calls to the regional airport close to your location. Tell them you'd like to charter an aerial flight for a photo project. Tell them that you need a sliding or shooting window on the plane to work from. In general a small aircraft will cost $200-$300 'wet'. That means with fuel, pilot, and plane.
2) Talk with your prospective pilot. Ask them how long they've been flying and in what conditions. I only fly with pilots who have several hundred hours of flight time in the type of scenarios I'd like to shoot. This is your life on the line so err on the side of caution. If something feels weird, schedule with someone else.
3) Show up early, and show up with a plan. I tell the pilots exactly where I want to fly and where I'd like the sun to be. Communicate about how you will work together up in the air.
4) Show time! Make sure your batteries are charged and you have big cards in your cameras, nobody wants to change cards mid flight. In tight planes you may not even have that luxury. For camera settings I shoot at 1/1000 of a second or faster and don't worry about fancy gyros or anything.
5) When you are in the air you can control your angles left and right, forward and back, AND up and down (on the ground you don't have his luxury). I use altitude all the time to create depth in my images. I love when some peaks are above the skyline and others are below... but this only happens at certain altitudes.
6) Shoot a lot! Ask the pilot to make banked turns to get the wing and wheels out of the picture. Or use the wings to create more depth to the frame.
7) Have fun! That's what it's all about anyhow right?!! #techtiptuesday #camp4pix


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