In short, it's following your subject even after you've pressed the shutter release button. It gives a sense of motion by means of blurring background in a way that is typical for background of moving subjects.
you will be looking around 1/80, i have managed to get away with 1/40 a few times, just need a good steady hand. alot of people seem to think that mono pods are helpful but i find they just get in the way and limit you.
It depends on the speed in which the car you are photographing is doing. For racing or drifting I tend to use 1/60-1/80 but for something quicker like an F1 car you will have to raise that substantially. And get better at panning because those things are bloody quick
It depends on the speed in which the car you are photographing is doing. For racing or drifting I tend to use 1/60-1/80 but for something quicker like an F1 car you will have to raise that substantially. And get better at panning because those things are bloody quick
If your subject is close enough try 2nd curtain flash to freeze the subject, looks cool. And no, it isn't cheating, just another way to create a blurred/sharp image
What I found at the Renault World Series is if the subject is moving fast you'll need to be panning it before you take the photo, so get it in view from a distance away and follow it, press the shutter and keep panning with the object. Set your camera to ai focus or whatever it is to keep it in focus.
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