Would you carry a tripod?
#51
Sage
Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 58
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From: Brisbane, Australia
Bikes: Chesini Precision 84, Kuota Kredo, Sabbath Silk Route, Van Nicholas Pioneer,
Forget about low light, camera shake, self portraiture and the like - there is one very good reason for carrying a tripod and that is HDR photography. Much touring photography is about recording the vistas the tourist passes through, and HDR photography produces stunning landscapes. HDR photography requires up to 5 images and a tripod really is the best way to ensure they overlay accurately.
Look at some of these landscapes.
Look at some of these landscapes.
Last edited by ekibayno; 11-05-13 at 10:40 PM. Reason: grammar corrections
#52
Senior Member

Joined: Jun 2003
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We went to an exhibition last night that was an essay for the Tall Ships festival that was held in Hobart just before we arrived back in the state. There were two shots that really grabbed me, and two that almost made the grade.
It's personal taste, I know, but if you are going to try for a neat light effect on a docked at night, do it at 2 or 3am in the morning when the place is deserted, not when there are a tens of people about creating ghosts that distract from the main subject. The two that missed in my estimation were like that.
I'll just also go back to my comment earlier about photographs being a record. I am applying for a tour guiding job at the moment, and one of the things I have done is sent the company a link to Machka's flickr account, essentially to validate my claims about travel. As it transpires, the principal of the business has a done a lot of bicycle touring herself. But a part of the job requires getting involved with the participants -- hiking, swimming and so on. I can show I have scope to do all those things, too.
So don't forget to include pictures of yourself doing stuff. It's then that a tripod can really come in handy, especially if you want to set up shots of you actually riding your bike.
It's personal taste, I know, but if you are going to try for a neat light effect on a docked at night, do it at 2 or 3am in the morning when the place is deserted, not when there are a tens of people about creating ghosts that distract from the main subject. The two that missed in my estimation were like that.
I'll just also go back to my comment earlier about photographs being a record. I am applying for a tour guiding job at the moment, and one of the things I have done is sent the company a link to Machka's flickr account, essentially to validate my claims about travel. As it transpires, the principal of the business has a done a lot of bicycle touring herself. But a part of the job requires getting involved with the participants -- hiking, swimming and so on. I can show I have scope to do all those things, too.
So don't forget to include pictures of yourself doing stuff. It's then that a tripod can really come in handy, especially if you want to set up shots of you actually riding your bike.
#53
Senior Member
Joined: Jul 2009
Posts: 443
Likes: 0
I'll just also go back to my comment earlier about photographs being a record. I am applying for a tour guiding job at the moment, and one of the things I have done is sent the company a link to Machka's flickr account, essentially to validate my claims about travel. As it transpires, the principal of the business has a done a lot of bicycle touring herself. But a part of the job requires getting involved with the participants -- hiking, swimming and so on. I can show I have scope to do all those things, too.
So don't forget to include pictures of yourself doing stuff. It's then that a tripod can really come in handy, especially if you want to set up shots of you actually riding your bike.
So don't forget to include pictures of yourself doing stuff. It's then that a tripod can really come in handy, especially if you want to set up shots of you actually riding your bike.
#54
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Joined: Apr 2008
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Bikes: Cervelo RS, Specialized Stumpjumper FSR Pro, Schwinn Typhoon, Nashbar touring, custom steel MTB
Forget about low light, camera shake, self portraiture and the like - there is one very good reason for carrying a tripod and that is HDR photography. Much touring photography is about recording the vistas the tourist passes through, and HDR photography produces stunning landscapes.
#55
Senior Member
Joined: Jul 2009
Posts: 443
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Do you know the difference between 1st grade art and 5th grade art?
The 5th graders know when to stop.
HDR is an incredible tool, but too many people don't know when to stop.
#56
And it's nothing new. Ansel Adams was a master at the analog version of tone mapping, known as dodging and burning, which was done when making prints from a negative. He also wrote the definitive book on the subject, albeit primarily for b/w prints: The Print (Ansel Adams) | Amazon.com
To a degree, much of this can be accomplished in the camera itself with a graduated neutral density filter, which lets you expose the sky differently than the ground, but assumes a flat horizon and doesn't lend itself particularly well to rugged mountain landscapes or skylines (for example).
Here's a picture from Wikipedia's HDR page that IMO shows an example of lost contrast and detail in three individual exposures (along the bottom) restored via HDR without going too terribly far overboard (click image for full sized picture):
And, yes, you need a tripod, and probably a camera with a built-in exposure bracketing function.
FWIW, my other use for a good, solid tripod and ballhead would be panoramas. Obviously, YMMV.
Last edited by john.b; 11-06-13 at 12:58 PM.
#57
Senior Member
Joined: Feb 2013
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From: Gypsum, CO
Bikes: Litespeed Obed, Cannondale Scalpel, Spcialized AWOL, Litespeed Solano, Cannondale Synapse
I am not a photographer by any stretch, I use point and shoot cameras or cellphone cameras. I do carry a mini- tripod, it is similar to this one.
Aaron
Aaron

#58
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Joined: Apr 2008
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Bikes: Cervelo RS, Specialized Stumpjumper FSR Pro, Schwinn Typhoon, Nashbar touring, custom steel MTB
Here's a picture from Wikipedia's HDR page that IMO shows an example of lost contrast and detail in three individual exposures (along the bottom) restored via HDR without going too terribly far overboard (click image for full sized picture):

#59
Sage
Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 58
Likes: 0
From: Brisbane, Australia
Bikes: Chesini Precision 84, Kuota Kredo, Sabbath Silk Route, Van Nicholas Pioneer,
The "problem" is that many can't resist the urge to go nuts on the tone mapping and turn the scene into some ethereal otherworldly image. Done with restraint, it can bring out highlights in one section of a image that might otherwise have blown out detail.
Here's a picture from Wikipedia's HDR page that IMO shows an example of lost contrast and detail in three individual exposures (along the bottom) restored via HDR without going too terribly far overboard...
Here's a picture from Wikipedia's HDR page that IMO shows an example of lost contrast and detail in three individual exposures (along the bottom) restored via HDR without going too terribly far overboard...





