I'm shooting somewhere between 1000-1500 images a day, depends on how many sports and what the sports are. I go through them all and select 60-100 for my clients flickr site. These ones are cropped, colour corrected, etc. If I have any special requests for pictures those get done right away, otherwise I go to bed.This is awesome! If you don't mind my asking (and feel free to hold your response until when you have more time...) what is your workflow/processing approach. I recently did photos for a marriage conference my wife and I attended and ended up spending a good deal of my downtime processing photos to correct the color (due to red and orange LEDs in the lighting), cropping, and reducing noise due to the poor lighting (despite using a flash on camera with a Fong diffuser). It got me thinking about sports photographers taking hundreds (or thousands) of photos in a day and then having to quickly get them uploaded or sent for publication...Just curious as to your approach.
Also, your work is amazing! Inspirational!
I'm shooting somewhere between 1000-1500 images a day, depends on how many sports and what the sports are. I go through them all and select 60-100 for my clients flickr site. These ones are cropped, colour corrected, etc. If I have any special requests for pictures those get done right away, otherwise I go to bed.This is awesome! If you don't mind my asking (and feel free to hold your response until when you have more time...) what is your workflow/processing approach. I recently did photos for a marriage conference my wife and I attended and ended up spending a good deal of my downtime processing photos to correct the color (due to red and orange LEDs in the lighting), cropping, and reducing noise due to the poor lighting (despite using a flash on camera with a Fong diffuser). It got me thinking about sports photographers taking hundreds (or thousands) of photos in a day and then having to quickly get them uploaded or sent for publication...Just curious as to your approach.
Also, your work is amazing! Inspirational!
All this means is that I have a few weeks after the event is over to go through everything, ID as many individual athletes as I can, team sports I just shoot the roster and attach it to the file. The good thing is that I'm under no pressure to rush and get the images sent out, as most are being used for future promotional material.
Thanks Ron, and thanks for all the kind words from everyone.
The one thing I didn't touch on is that for all that is going on, the long hours, doing what I really enjoy and coming away with decent images, I've missed some nice images as well. I'll talk to some of the volunteer camera owners, and they envy the gear I'm using, some take pictures of it. Others are shy to talk to me, and that's fine. I met a high school student last night, she was using a Canon rebel and a decent lens, but it was also a slow f5.6 and I asked her what she had her camera set at, this was at the wheelchair basketball. I was shooting at iso-3200-4000, 400th-500th sec at 2.8, she was at iso 16,500, and another photographer told her to shoot on aperture, well, she couldn't understand why a lot of her pictures were blurry. She was smart, had taken some courses and was enjoying what she was doing. I helped her out with the manual settings, and then gave her my 70-200 2.8 to use. She was really surprised that someone would do that, I don't know if her pictures got better, and she could only uses the lens for a short while, her wrist was getting tired.
Sharing what I have and what I do with other people helps keep the mind going in the right direction, especially when I start to get tried, wakes the brain up a bit.