Reflex Action: A Surf Photographer's Top Tips

Similar documents
Underwater with the RX-100 By Neal Katz

!!!! finished video as an example. See Video Examples for more information about the camera I used.

Shootout at the Rodeo

Thinking of the Serve as a Weapon

Transcript for the BLOSSMS Lesson. An Introduction to the Physics of Sailing

Paul W. Gillespie's Sports Shooting Tips. General Sports Shooting Tips

Fox Chapel Golf Club - Pittsburgh, PA

MARK WILLIAMS: We would like to welcome Tony Romo to the interview room at the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship.

DAN BAILEY PHOTO SPRING 2013 JOURNAL

AMANDA HERRINGTON: Coming into this week, a place that you've had success as a playoff event, what is it about TPC Boston?

then extrapolated to larger area just based on the length of bank [that actually falls in this category].

Finally Out of the Sand

PHIL STAMBAUGH: Okay. Maybe talk about your game right now.

PRE-TOURNAMENT INTERVIEW TRANSCRIPT: FRED COUPLES Thursday, August 29, 2013

Press Conference Barry Melrose June 24, 2008

Table of Contents. Page 2 of 36

10 Essential Tips on Clearing a House

Hitting The Driver Made Easy

STEWART MOORE: We'd like to welcome Jean Van De Velde to the interview room here at the 10th annual Dick's Sporting Goods Open.

You don't need any kind of deep understanding of the market in order to use the following method, you just need to know how to use the MT4 platform.

Corporate Golf Organisers Guide

CERT Helmet Alternatives By: William P. Flinn

START AUDIO. Hi, my name is Tony Kostick. I am the club doctor of Stevenage FC and have been since 1995, which was my first season.

ULTRAcompact Housing

THE INTERROGATION. Written by. Mike Boas

Underwater Housing for Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZS60, DMC-TZ80

Diving. With Dinosaurs. The Nile Crocs. Okavango River, Botswana

200DLM/A Underwater Housing for Sony Alpha A6400 Mirrorless Cameras

PRE-TOURNAMENT INTERVIEW TRANSCRIPT: INBEE PARK Wednesday, November 20, 2013

July 17, 2014 COACH NICK SABAN. An interview with: Coach Saban

MODERATOR: Talk about your game. You played on the PGA Tour a little bit and just talk about that right now.

11 Short Game Drills To Help You Up And Down It From Anywhere!

January 24, Q. How much more difficult do you expect the course to play?

Brandt, if we can just get some opening comments on the round and what keyed you to the 59.

Underwater Housing for Canon EOS 100D Rebel SL1. Housing Kit for Canon EOS 100D Rebel SL1. Product Registration. Product Number 6970.

Digital Underwater. Photographer Specialty Course Instructor Outline 2005 Edition

Game Time Copyright Basketball Inner Circle 1 of 1

Couples Sunday.txt 1

Surfing Tourism Destination Feasibility Study, Kincardine, Ontario

QUESTIONS FOR COACH SHERRI COALE AND PLAYERS VIONISE PIERRE LOUIS AND MADDIE MANNING

EFFORTLESS SWIMMING. Mastering Freestyle Technique: How to swim faster, longer and easier (and look good doing it)

MODERATOR: Have you had the chance to fish or will you go fishing this week?

Men s Basketball Friday Press Conference Quotes Head coach Jay Wright and Wildcats captains took the podium Friday afternoon

Oak Hill Country Club ~ Rochester, NY JAY HAAS

"ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION"

JAY PROSCH COREY GRANT NOSA EGUAE

Super Action Baseball

Bears of Katmai - A Photo Expedition with Barbara Eddy

How To Kiteboard: The Fastest Way To Learn To Kitesurf By Hunter Powers, Susannah Saunders

Underwater Housing for Canon G7X Mark II

Instruction Manual. Page 1 Package Contents. Page 2 Nomenclature. Page 2 Initial Setup and Water Testing. Page 3 Installing your phone

1 KINGSTON HEATH GOLF CLUB 17/11/12. .TALISKER MASTERS 2012 Adam Scott

SEC Football Media Days Thursday, July 16, 2015 Coach Mark Richt Georgia

Written By: Dozuki System

Oak Hill Country Club ~ Rochester, NY BERNHARD LANGER

Essential Tennis Podcast #129

Treasure Island 3. Little bit of rum

JEFF GORDON BACK IN BAY AREA FOR THE DODGE/SAVE MART 350 AT INFINEON RACEWAY ON SUNDAY, JUNE 22, 2003

Q. How do you feel about going in (inaudible?) What does it mean to you? When you got the call, what was your maybe you thought you were in trouble?

200DLM/A Underwater Housing for Canon EOS M50, EOS Kiss M

June 8, Q. Bernhard, you're of a certain age where I don't think the tour, the PGA Tour stopped in Philadelphia. BERNHARD LANGER: Correct.

Table of Contents Planning Your Event:

Underwater Housing for Canon EOS M

Justin Thomas Press Conference

Q. What would it mean to break through this week, especially on home soil?

Walker Cup. John "Spider" Miller Braden Thornberry Doug Ghim USA Press Conference. Friday, September 8, 2017

Ground Transition Reversals By UFCgaming.com

Tommy Armour III.txt 1

The Fascinating World of Underwater Photography

Greg Gard Wisconsin Badgers

DO NOT BET FROM YOUR BANKROLL.

AL LUNSFORD: All right, we're very happy to be joined here by Stacy Lewis.

How a Veteran Caddie Preps for Royal Birkdale

Wildlife Model Workshop Triple D Game Farm, Kalispell, MT June 4-7, 2018 With Lewis Kemper

DAVE SENKO: And then you birdied three of the next four holes, No. 13, the par 3.

Underwater Housing for Sony Alpha a6300 Mirrorless Camera

Large Group Week #4 June 29, 2014

Head Coaches News Conference Michigan State Head Coach Mark Dantonio

Cover Page for Lab Report Group Portion. Compressible Flow in a Converging-Diverging Nozzle

Favorite Drills For player and team development Wednesday, July 25, 10:20-11:10 AM Main Gym

COACH MACK BROWN. Document1

25 Quick Tips for Amateur Umpires Youth League Style

RYDER CUP MEDIA CONFERENCE Thursday, March 13, 2014

Sea Fishing Rigs Guide

When the offense attacks our goal, they are most dangerous when they can get to the center of the ice or when they have clear passing lanes.

WAVE MOTION. Let's start with an intuition-building exercise that deals with waves in matter, since

file://c:\program Files\Microsoft Games\Microsoft Flight Simulator X\FSWeb\lessons\Stud...

Texas A&M Quotes Coach Jimbo Fisher

Blossoms_-_How_Big_is_a_Mole_v4

2017 ROOKIE OF THE YEAR TROPHY PRESENTATION January 23, 2018 JAY MONAHAN XANDER SCHAUFFELE

Grappling Concepts, Lesson 2 Making Yourself Heavier

Bellevue Steelers Youth Football A Beginners Guide

Trials & Trails with Kenny Belaey

How Can I Get My Child To Focus

MATCHED BETTING GUIDE

Q. How is it and what have you -- where are you back, 100 percent, 80 percent?

Fatigue Take Control Part 5

Bears, Bears and Bears Oh My! July 21-28, 2019 Lake Clark National Park, Alaska

To encourage and develop an interest in photography. We hope you are Focusing on Photography and having fun...

OLIVIA McMILLAN: Cam, what an incredible day. It's all I'm sure been a bit of a blur for you, but can you tell us how you're feeling?

Transcription:

SEPTEMBER 11, 2018 INTERMEDIATE Reflex Action: A Surf Photographer's Top Tips Featuring JAY WATSON Jay Watson Kenny "Skindog" Collins D300, AF-S NIKKOR 300mm f/4d IF-ED, 1/1250 second, f/7.1, ISO 200, shutter priority, Matrix metering. Capturing great surf shots starts with the advice you'd get for any sport: know what to expect so you'll be able to anticipate the action. The thing is, you can't ever count on the behavior of the next wave, so with the sport of surfing the scales are tipped toward the unpredictable. There are, however, ways to level things off a bit. "Any photographer who does the research and keeps practicing is going to pick up any sport," says pro photographer and surfer Jay Watson. "But there's an inside culture to surfing, and knowing and getting to be friends with surfers gives you better access to better surfers, and you're going to get better photos."

If that kind of access isn't immediately available to you, not to worry. We all start somewhere, and if your start is at a local beach shooting amateurs or beginners, make the most of that opportunity to develop your skills and to network. "There are always good guys around," Jay says, "and if you share your images with them, they'll likely tell you about other surfers." Plus the local beach might offer an advantage when it comes to shooting positions. Jay shoots a lot of competitive surfing events and good vantage points can be hard to come by. "It's best if I can shoot parallel to a wave that's breaking, and I'll set up anywhere the beach, docks, jetties, cliffs, and sometimes I'll be in a boat." A word about safety here: it should always be your first consideration. On the beach, pier or jetty, stay aware of what's going on around you; don't bury yourself in the viewfinder. If you're just starting out, it makes sense to shoot from the pier, the beach or the bluff until seriousness, skills and the right circumstances suggest it might be time for a boat ride. If you've hired a boat or a jet ski, it's the pilot's job to keep you out of danger and out of the way of the surfers. The professionals who provide these services are experts; as Jay says, "I'm not going to grab my next door neighbor and ask him to take me out there." In all cases, the bottom line is that the idea of surf photography is great images, not great risk. Besides, Jay says, "Get in the way of a surfer and the least that's going to happen is you're not going to be welcome to come back." Jay Watson Any photog rapher who does the research and keeps practicing is going to pick up any sport...but there's an inside culture to surfing, and knowing and getting to be friends with surfers g ives you better access to better surfers, and you're going to get better photos. Zach Wormhoudt D300, AF Zoom-NIKKOR 35-70mm f/2.8d, 1/160 second, f/8, ISO 200, manual exposure, Matrix metering.

Jay Watson Sunrise at Cowells, Santa Cruz, CA D300, AF Zoom-NIKKOR 35-70mm f/2.8d, 1/1250 second, f/4.5, ISO 200, manual exposure, Matrix metering. Key elements of surfing photography Position If you can get parallel to the wave right where it's breaking and shoot over the top of the surfers, you've got a great spot. With, say, a 70-200mm zoom, "It's a lens a lot of photographers have in their kits," Jay says, you can shoot from a pier or a jetty and the surfer is going to be big in the frame. Sometimes you can even get a bit of the back of the wave. "The challenge is finding a spot that gives you a lot of options," Jay says. "The surfers will come into the beach on an angle, and you'll get the best pictures if you've found a spot where you can cover where they're going." Focus If the surfer isn't sharp, the picture isn't good, simple as that. Like other sports, the success of the shot is judged by the sharpness of the subject. "I do a lot of testing of lenses and focus modes, and I'll most often use dynamic area autofocus, set to the camera's 51 focus points, and continuous tracking." Advance

As you might expect, Jay favors continuous high speed advance to achieve high frame rates, but he thinks in terms of capturing chunks of action, not ribbons of images. "I try not to just spray and pray because I don't want to end up spending a lot of time at the computer because all I did was hold down the shutter release. I think about frames per second in terms of getting into a rhythm to catch a good chunk of the action in front of me." Speed Setting "If you want to be a better photographer, in any field, learn to shoot sports," Jay says. "Shooting sports teaches you to know all the ins and outs of your camera and how to quickly operate the functions, the buttons and menus." In a nutshell: stuff's happening; don't be fumbling with camera settings. Size "A good tip is to make sure your subject is bigger in the frame than one of the camera's focus points in the viewfinder," Jay says. "If the surfer, in motion out on the water, isn't any bigger than one of those points, you're too far away. You need to get closer or get a longer zoom. I always like to have a couple of focus [points] fitting on the surfer that'll give me some overlap of focus points, and that's especially important if I'm shooting from a boat. The boat's moving, the surfer's moving, I'm moving I need every advantage." Exposure Jay most often sets his cameras for shutter priority, then makes test exposures and checks the histogram to make sure he isn't clipping the whitewater's highlights. If he is, he'll set -1/3 exposure compensation as a starting point and, if need be, keep going until the whitewater is no longer clipped. "You want detail in the whitewater," he says, "so always rely on the histogram [rather than] the image on the LCD screen for exposure." Research Just starting out? It's a cool idea to check out some surfing magazines to see what's being done. "Surfer and Surfer's Journal have great photography," Jay says. "You can get ideas for pictures and learn about camera positions, vantage points, framing, lighting and proximity to subjects. A photographer doing any sport needs to find out how that sport

translates itself to photography." Protection Jay doesn't use an underwater housing or a skylight or UV filter, just common sense when it comes to keeping his cameras and lenses in the game. He's not overprotective, but takes "reasonable caution and care" to keeping the cameras and lenses clear of salt water. It's obvious, but we'll say it anyway: splashing water is a signal to pay attention to what's going on with the gear. Variety You'll see from Jay's photos that he likes to vary his coverage. He'll take the camera away from the water from time to time for shots of shadows, silhouettes and boards on the beach. "Those kinds of shots round out the coverage, and give people a greater feel for what the sport, the culture and the lifestyle's like. You definitely want the atmosphere, the ritual, the details they're all part of the story." Jay Watson Western Swell D300, AF-S VR Zoom-NIKKOR 70-200mm f/2.8g IF-ED, 1/1250 second, f/5, ISO 250, shutter priority, Matrix metering. Jay's website, www.jaywatson.com, offers more surfing images as well as examples of his corporate and lifestyle photography.

Featuring JAY WATSON MORE ARTICLES BY THIS CONTRIBUTOR