Desi
No longer a newbie, moving up!
- Joined
- Sep 28, 2011
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- Location
- Los Angeles
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This week has been the annual pilgrimage of some of the worlds best cyclists to the Tour of California. Yesterday the race was decided on the slopes of Mount Baldy in the San Gabriel Mountains east of Los Angeles. I rode up the hill with a backpack full of camera gear to catch the action.
I've never really tried shooting a bike race. I found it fairly difficult. The riders came by at noon on a 90 degree day with no shade. Gettting the right exposure was a challenge and the asphalt came out looking blown out. Also, I made the mistake of picking the wrong autofocus mode (I was riding with a friend who shoots canon who told me to put it on servo mode....I figured this meant AF-S, not realizing the that is the single shot mode. I lost at least 5 out of 6 shoots to crappy focus. The ones that were reasonably well focused had too narrow depth of field for what I wanted. I wanted a shutter speed of about 1/500, so with the 70-300 lens and a polarizer, I wound up using f7.1 and bumping up the ISO to 500. Maybe I could have done without the polarizer, but I was trying to avoid glare from the asphalt. Maybe I should have been farther from the corner to get better DOF.
All in all, the experience has really left me in awe of sports/cycling photographers such as Graham Watson who make it look so easy.
There is a real cast of characters on the road, especially at the finish line. I really wanted to catch the descent, so I hung out on a lonely stretch of rode....and met the Pope. I didn't have the legs to reach the ski lifts at Baldy this year.
I hope you enjoy the images. Please feel free to comment and critique.
Desi
1. Il Papa, the shepherd of Mt Baldy
DSC_0427.jpg by Javier Descalzi, on Flickr
2. An unknown rider on the descent of Glendora Ridge Road

DSC_0512.jpg by Javier Descalzi, on Flickr
3. The BMC squad. George Hincapie is third in that line. It is an s-curve. Note Hincapie is upright wile the front and back of the line lean in opposite directions. Also, there is almost no shadow. I think the asphalt acted as a reflector.

DSC_0486.jpg by Javier Descalzi, on Flickr
4. The Blessing of the Race Helicpopter
DSC_0596.jpg by Javier Descalzi, on Flickr
5. The Shepherd in search of his flock (serious racoon eyes....I with I had brought a flash to shoot the people on the roadside...no detail left to be brought out in lightroom...I tried)

DSC_0600.jpg by Javier Descalzi, on Flickr
6. Attending to the suffering masses (this is the group of sprinters who ride way in the rear on the mountain stages...this one had over 10,000 feet of climbing)
DSC_0618.jpg by Javier Descalzi, on Flickr
I hope you enjoyed these images. Thanks for looking.
I've never really tried shooting a bike race. I found it fairly difficult. The riders came by at noon on a 90 degree day with no shade. Gettting the right exposure was a challenge and the asphalt came out looking blown out. Also, I made the mistake of picking the wrong autofocus mode (I was riding with a friend who shoots canon who told me to put it on servo mode....I figured this meant AF-S, not realizing the that is the single shot mode. I lost at least 5 out of 6 shoots to crappy focus. The ones that were reasonably well focused had too narrow depth of field for what I wanted. I wanted a shutter speed of about 1/500, so with the 70-300 lens and a polarizer, I wound up using f7.1 and bumping up the ISO to 500. Maybe I could have done without the polarizer, but I was trying to avoid glare from the asphalt. Maybe I should have been farther from the corner to get better DOF.
All in all, the experience has really left me in awe of sports/cycling photographers such as Graham Watson who make it look so easy.
There is a real cast of characters on the road, especially at the finish line. I really wanted to catch the descent, so I hung out on a lonely stretch of rode....and met the Pope. I didn't have the legs to reach the ski lifts at Baldy this year.
I hope you enjoy the images. Please feel free to comment and critique.
Desi
1. Il Papa, the shepherd of Mt Baldy

2. An unknown rider on the descent of Glendora Ridge Road

DSC_0512.jpg by Javier Descalzi, on Flickr
3. The BMC squad. George Hincapie is third in that line. It is an s-curve. Note Hincapie is upright wile the front and back of the line lean in opposite directions. Also, there is almost no shadow. I think the asphalt acted as a reflector.

DSC_0486.jpg by Javier Descalzi, on Flickr
4. The Blessing of the Race Helicpopter

DSC_0596.jpg by Javier Descalzi, on Flickr
5. The Shepherd in search of his flock (serious racoon eyes....I with I had brought a flash to shoot the people on the roadside...no detail left to be brought out in lightroom...I tried)

DSC_0600.jpg by Javier Descalzi, on Flickr
6. Attending to the suffering masses (this is the group of sprinters who ride way in the rear on the mountain stages...this one had over 10,000 feet of climbing)

DSC_0618.jpg by Javier Descalzi, on Flickr
I hope you enjoyed these images. Thanks for looking.
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