Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2002/11/21
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Adam Bridge wrote: Lots of good stuff on shooting swimming . Ok Adam old buddy, fess up. ;-) You either were a competive swimmer, coach or you've shot a lot of swimming to understand and make those observations. All excellent for any Leica user thinking of photographing swimming, local, school, or high end competition. Thanks Adam, ted > Ted has lots of good observations. > > Your head-on start is a challenging shot best used for big powerful athletes who > SNAP off the blocks. For a brief moment these athletes will have their backs > arched and their heads up (not all but most) and that's the moment you have to > shoot for. You'll need to study the athelete you want to photograph either > during warmups when they are doing starts or in a pervious heat to know if > their starting technique is suitable. > > Swim coaches are subtle people, but there are often moments of true intensity > between a coach and an athlete before the finals of a big race. In college dual > meets you won't see this very often. In conference championships there WILL be > moments. > > Swimmers before they compete slide into their own space. It's the moments AFTER > a race where emotion is most often found. If you are shooting distance swimmers > you'll find that they are not as "blown out" at the end of their races as the > sprinters who completely deplete themselves in the 50 or 100s, not breathing at > all in the 50s and only rarely in the 100s. They have a few moments after they > finish where most are just letting their bodies catch up before the meaning of > what they have done latches in. > > Some athletes swim to make your photo #1 a great shot because they tuck their > heads way back and almost are looking backwards in the pool. > > I find photo #3, which I assume to be the breaststroke, to be interesting, his > canted style is distinct. Shoot to catch the hands just as they begin to thrust > forwad or just as the head is about the begin its downward motion into the > water. > > I find the shallow depth of field in the two butterfly shots to be distracting. > You don't have the luxury of huge strobes mounted on the ceiling in order to > catch the swimmer with tons of light so you don't have to be shooting wide-open. > Maybe let the athlete get a little closer. > > Turns are fascinating - lots of water motion going on - sometimes you can make > an abstract from the froth as the barely-visible swimmer turns. > > Coaches on distance events (1000, 1650 in short course events 800 and 1500 in > long course) can be fascinating. In virutally all other races the coach doesn't > communicate with the swimmer but in distance events they whistle, jesture, use > body languge, facial expressions, the works. It's a gruelling experience because > while the athlete has tons of aerobic capacity the muscles of legs, shoulders > and arms are being seriously depleted. You won't see many gasping at the end, > but some of them struggle to get out of the water, especially at pools with > international ends that rise a half-meter or so above the surface of the water. > > If you take the time, watch, and look for the quiet moments of drama longside > the pool I'm sure you'll find them. > > College swimming is a GREAT sport. The longest lasting record on continuous > championships is held by the men of Kenyon College in Div III which is decades > old. > > Good luck - keep us (I can't resist it) posted on your efforts. > > Adam Bridge > -- > To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html