I know this is almost a copy of my welcome post but at least here it is specific to motorsport (although I imagine it would apply to any sort of outside photography/lighting......
I am quite new to photography but I love the action shots of motorsport. I have seen some amazing shots on here and if I could achieve even half that standard I would be happy!
I am getting the hang of panning with the cars to capture the movement, but I haven't got the hang of lighting and how to avoid high contrast from sun glare without seriously underexposing the shot. For example, I took some shots a few days ago at Brands Hatch. There is only place I could find to stand without a fence in the way (inside the hairpin just over the bridge near the paddock) and the sun was at approx 2oclock. The overall shot was exposed ok but the sun glare completely wiped out the windscreen on a lot of the pictures and and the white cars a lot of the detail was wiped out aswell. I tried in all the different metering modes but the shots still come out over exposed.
I am using a Canon EOS 550D with Canon EFS 55-250mm IS II lens
Do any other motorsport photographers have any suggestions on how to get the correct exposure? Is it just a case of trying to reposition so the sun is in a different place?
I am quite new to photography but I love the action shots of motorsport. I have seen some amazing shots on here and if I could achieve even half that standard I would be happy!
I am getting the hang of panning with the cars to capture the movement, but I haven't got the hang of lighting and how to avoid high contrast from sun glare without seriously underexposing the shot. For example, I took some shots a few days ago at Brands Hatch. There is only place I could find to stand without a fence in the way (inside the hairpin just over the bridge near the paddock) and the sun was at approx 2oclock. The overall shot was exposed ok but the sun glare completely wiped out the windscreen on a lot of the pictures and and the white cars a lot of the detail was wiped out aswell. I tried in all the different metering modes but the shots still come out over exposed.
I am using a Canon EOS 550D with Canon EFS 55-250mm IS II lens
Do any other motorsport photographers have any suggestions on how to get the correct exposure? Is it just a case of trying to reposition so the sun is in a different place?
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