Starting a thread to discuss bicycle photography. A place to ask questions and learn new tricks. I am very much a beginner and believe I am at the start of a huge learning curve. That said don’t consider this initial post professional advice.
I will start it off describing the equipment in my camera bag, my current technique, and then some sample photos.
My Camera Bag:
Camera- Canon EOS 60D
Lens- EFS mount 18-135mm 1:3.5-5.6
Lens- EFS mount 10-22mm 1:3.5-4.5
Lens- EF mount 50mm 1:1.4
Collapsible mono-pod
My camera has a APS—C sensor. This is smaller than a full frame sensor which means if I use an EF mount lens don’t get the full focal length. (edit: maybe I should say, I get increased focal length? Confusing). The formula is multiply by 1.6. For example my 50mm EF lens is in practice a 80mm lens. 50 x 1.6 = 80. This does not apply to my EFS lenses.
Sorry that was pretty nerdy.
My 50mm is the highest quality lens in my bag. However, I am currently using the 18-135 the most. 2 reasons. 1- my technique involves zooming in as much as possible (135mm) 2- it has Image Stabilization and my 50mm does not.
OK. Still pretty nerdy. But seems kind of important to me.
My technique:
I found a lake about 2 miles from the house that I can set the bike on a berm (higher ground than I am standing) with lake in background. The distant background helps eliminate distractions.
I zoom into 135mm and walk backwards until the bicycle is in the frame. I also increase the aperture as much as possible to blur the background. I was having real difficulty holding the camera still which is why I preferred the lens with image stabilization. I recently bought a monopod which helps. What I am still trying to figure out is a way to adjust the settings to increase the shutter speed. That should also help with my inability to hold camera still. At least that’s what my beginner brain thinks. Do I increase the ISO for this?
I currently do not do any post processing. I do not have photoshop. Is there any good freeware software? GIMP?
Anyone have thoughts or experience with image stabilization?
Sample photos of my current technique:
I will start it off describing the equipment in my camera bag, my current technique, and then some sample photos.
My Camera Bag:
Camera- Canon EOS 60D
Lens- EFS mount 18-135mm 1:3.5-5.6
Lens- EFS mount 10-22mm 1:3.5-4.5
Lens- EF mount 50mm 1:1.4
Collapsible mono-pod
My camera has a APS—C sensor. This is smaller than a full frame sensor which means if I use an EF mount lens don’t get the full focal length. (edit: maybe I should say, I get increased focal length? Confusing). The formula is multiply by 1.6. For example my 50mm EF lens is in practice a 80mm lens. 50 x 1.6 = 80. This does not apply to my EFS lenses.
Sorry that was pretty nerdy.
My 50mm is the highest quality lens in my bag. However, I am currently using the 18-135 the most. 2 reasons. 1- my technique involves zooming in as much as possible (135mm) 2- it has Image Stabilization and my 50mm does not.
OK. Still pretty nerdy. But seems kind of important to me.
My technique:
I found a lake about 2 miles from the house that I can set the bike on a berm (higher ground than I am standing) with lake in background. The distant background helps eliminate distractions.
I zoom into 135mm and walk backwards until the bicycle is in the frame. I also increase the aperture as much as possible to blur the background. I was having real difficulty holding the camera still which is why I preferred the lens with image stabilization. I recently bought a monopod which helps. What I am still trying to figure out is a way to adjust the settings to increase the shutter speed. That should also help with my inability to hold camera still. At least that’s what my beginner brain thinks. Do I increase the ISO for this?
I currently do not do any post processing. I do not have photoshop. Is there any good freeware software? GIMP?
Anyone have thoughts or experience with image stabilization?
Sample photos of my current technique:
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