This photography tutorial is a remake of the first training film we ever made. By combining a slow shutter speed with a moving car you can get an amazing motion ...
Mike! thanks for this video! Could you answer my question: does it matter
which direction the car is moving? Will the motion blur more natural if the
cars moves forward?
+ilyaGNU I agree. You's need a long arm camera mount to bolt onto the car so they move precisely together if you want the camera further out front - MIKE
+Mike Browne I understand! Your method of taking photos of moving objects is quite simple but does its job very well. There is no camera wobbling, and you can do it alone! The most important thing is the shutter speed has to be rather long, isn't? Though while shooting a moving car I would like to see the car's "face". I think in this case I have to be much farther from the car.
Good question +ilyaGNU You could experiment to see if there's any difference between direction of travel, I've done tracking shots from a vehicle moving alongside a motorcycle in same direction but can't see any difference in blur. (follow link below, it's no 14 in gallery) However I'm going to ask you a couple of questions to help you think it through (I'm big on that one) 1. If the engine is running and car powering itself, would there be vibration and what would that do to the image? 2. If you had the car moving forwards being pushed, where would you have to be? Hope this helps.. - MIKE :-)//www.photographycourses.biz/commissioned-work
that's really good. thanks for the video. if I looked at the photo first I
would of thought that's a hard picture to capture but with all the
knowledge and skills you have you made it look easy. well done
Mr Browne,
I am a devout follower of your Youtube channel. Thank you for sharing all
of your tips, they have helped me immensely.
I am curious if you use a gyroscopic camera mount and if so which one do
you use? I am shooting cars for magazines and would like to step my game up
and be able to provide the best motion shots I can.
Thank you for your time.
Kyle
Possibly +David Atkin if you think it through. You'd have to keep the bike steady and upright as you move it. Probably easier to make a rig to mount the camera on, shoot when actually riding then you won't need such a slow shutter speed and will still get motion blur.
Tracy Chapman - Fast Car (Ingenia ft. Bmen Remake)
Get your FREE DOWNLOAD now at: //www.ingeniamusic.com/facebook-music Stay in Touch: https://soundcloud.com/ingenia ...
Hi, this is my short remake of "Fast Car" by Jonas Blue and Dakota. It's not the full song because i wanted to show how it's made, not how good i am ;P If you ...