NickD
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I'd appreciate any advice on the above.
I know the game, I've been practicing for many years, and I've managed a few reasonable shots at our annual seminar, in a huge gym with lots of natural light, but I expect this to be much more challenging.
I'm off to a competition in a couple of weeks that I've fought in a number of times, but have not been selected this year, and as I'll be attending for moral support and fetching and carrying anyway, I thought I'd take the camera. There have been a few pics of me taken at this competition over the years, and they're all... well... pretty orange.
There is no natural light at all, and Kendo kit is generally dark indigo, which I'm guessing isn't a match made in heaven. Worse still, as someone who doesn't really shoot indoor sports (and has no particular ambitions to do so beyond maybe the odd decent shot of my club-mates if possible, for personal satisfaction), my kit is not really up to the job. D90 (so forget anything beyond 1600), 18-105, 55-300, 35mm 1.8 and Sigma 18-50 2.8 is what I have to work with. Based on previous experience I'm thinking close shots, and/or shallow DOF shots would be best as it'll be pretty crowded, and cluttered backgrounds will be the order of the day. I'm also guessing that faster action shots are out-ish, as getting shutter speeds high enough will be pretty hard.
I've not really ever messed around with exposure compensation, and assume any gains via this route come at a price in some other area?
I'd appreciate any and all ideas from the point of view of 'In your situation, with your kit I'd probably....' whether about technical aspects or the kind of shots to attempt/avoid.
Nothing is at stake here, I'm simply someone who enjoys both Kendo and Photograpy, and who has the opportunity to combine the two for a day in a couple of weeks time. Over the course of the day I should have plenty of chance to experiment, as there will be Ladies, Juniors and Team events, but I'd be grateful for the opinions of those who do similar things to this more often than I do, to cut down on wasted shots.
Thanks in advance!
I know the game, I've been practicing for many years, and I've managed a few reasonable shots at our annual seminar, in a huge gym with lots of natural light, but I expect this to be much more challenging.
I'm off to a competition in a couple of weeks that I've fought in a number of times, but have not been selected this year, and as I'll be attending for moral support and fetching and carrying anyway, I thought I'd take the camera. There have been a few pics of me taken at this competition over the years, and they're all... well... pretty orange.
There is no natural light at all, and Kendo kit is generally dark indigo, which I'm guessing isn't a match made in heaven. Worse still, as someone who doesn't really shoot indoor sports (and has no particular ambitions to do so beyond maybe the odd decent shot of my club-mates if possible, for personal satisfaction), my kit is not really up to the job. D90 (so forget anything beyond 1600), 18-105, 55-300, 35mm 1.8 and Sigma 18-50 2.8 is what I have to work with. Based on previous experience I'm thinking close shots, and/or shallow DOF shots would be best as it'll be pretty crowded, and cluttered backgrounds will be the order of the day. I'm also guessing that faster action shots are out-ish, as getting shutter speeds high enough will be pretty hard.
I've not really ever messed around with exposure compensation, and assume any gains via this route come at a price in some other area?
I'd appreciate any and all ideas from the point of view of 'In your situation, with your kit I'd probably....' whether about technical aspects or the kind of shots to attempt/avoid.
Nothing is at stake here, I'm simply someone who enjoys both Kendo and Photograpy, and who has the opportunity to combine the two for a day in a couple of weeks time. Over the course of the day I should have plenty of chance to experiment, as there will be Ladies, Juniors and Team events, but I'd be grateful for the opinions of those who do similar things to this more often than I do, to cut down on wasted shots.
Thanks in advance!