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ryans
05-07-2006, 12:27 PM
With the prices dropping on Digital SLR camera's it seems that nearly everyone can afford one. This is great because it's bringing so many more people into learning the art of photography. I've been shooting for a few years now and I still consider myself far from a good photographer. I'm learning something new everyday though, and I wanted to teach you out there how to capture motion of a car.

The beginner will put his camera in sport mode and just snap away. You'll get some great shots but the subject will look like it's frozen in time. Here is an example picture of what I'm talking about.

http://www.vehiclephotography.com/gallery/files/1/t0.jpg
(Pictured Here is John Thawley who is a great motorsports photographer and Honda Challenge Participant)

So as you can see in this picture the subject looks like he might be parked there, or he may be moving. You don't know. Why do pictures look like this? You get this look mainly because of the shutter speed. The shutter opens and the camera records the digital image. The faster the shutter opens and closes the better the clarity of the image. This picture was shot with a 1/1600th of a shutter speed. This means that for 1 second time period that shutter was only open for 1600th of that second. At this speed it will make anything going fast or slow look like it's standing still. You should be able to see every detail in the image.


So how can you make that car look like it's moving? You can do this by slowing down the shutter speed. By doing so the image will not grab all the details in the shot and if anything is moving in the shot it will appear blurry. The longer the shutter stays open, the more light the camera lets in and the less detail your image will get. This sounds bad but if done right makes an awesome photo.

Now we don't want the subject to be blurry so what you do is you follow the subject from left to right or right to left depending on which they are approaching. Just use a nice fluid motion and once you feel the subject is where you want it snap that picture. This is know as panning. Panning is following the subject in motion and then taking the picture.

If your camera has a time value mode such as on the Canon's TV mode this is a good place to start. You can set the shutter speed and the camera will set the other functions such as Aperture and probably the ISO.

An ideal setting to start with on a bright day might be a shutter speed of 250. As you get better with practice some people even go as low as 80. So with TV mode you set the shutter speed and it does the rest.

This picture here was shot at 1/100 sec. (1/100sec, F14 ISO-100)

http://www.vehiclephotography.com/gallery/files/1/t1.jpg

There are few things to keep in mind when panning. The lower the shutter speed the more throw aways you'll have. Throw aways are blurry pictures that suck. As you get better though you'll have less of them. Anytime I shoot, I shoot some low shutter speed shots and then to be on the safe side i'll bump it up to 500 and shoot them too just in case. So have fun out there and gets lots of practice. You can even practice on cars just driving by down your street.

RAWbin
05-07-2006, 02:45 PM
Great write-up, I gotta try this one with my car :D

imported_STP03Bluesi
05-07-2006, 08:33 PM
Nice write up!:)

Motegi
05-07-2006, 08:34 PM
Thanks for the info! Now its time for me to practice!

Cali Agent
05-20-2006, 03:26 PM
Bump!! Could have used this info when I was at Formula D Long Beach!
Thanks Ryan

Abattoir
06-12-2006, 10:49 AM
bumped a sticky... =] i find humor in that... but yes drift and this technique are an excellent combo.

i'm totaly gonna use it in sonoma if i can get up there.

XtremeModifier
07-31-2006, 07:07 PM
I got one of a first-gen mx6 turbo my friend owns, I'll be posting that up, as well as the RSX Type-S I shot at the raceway.

nex~gen
08-18-2006, 04:30 PM
Thanks for the info :)

imported_wolf
01-29-2007, 05:27 PM
ok so a couple of questions on this do you still keep it in "sports" mode and can this be done on cheaper models? and I'm assuming that you still have to move the camera with the car which gives you the background blur but it would be hard to keep the car not blurred wouldn't it? please be gentle I am a newb :)

XtremeModifier
01-30-2007, 08:01 AM
It is very difficult to not blur the car. What you need to do is find the point where you get the background blurred, yet your speed-match with the vehicle is close enough that the car isn't blurred. Just find one of those stops on the side of the highway, and practice shooting cars driving by. Speeds of 65+ are preferable, although it can be done with any speed vehicle. And remember that the longer the zoom, the shorter the exposure, and for a 50mm lens the longest you can hand-hold for a still is around 1/60th.

If you have any more q's, feel free to ask. And don't worry, we don't bite!

andial951
05-26-2008, 08:13 PM
cool..........I'm just learning on my new Cannon....I will give this a try next time

GlenB
05-27-2008, 10:06 AM
Man great shots!

cts_incorporated
01-10-2011, 02:23 AM
Can't see the shots, probably have to upgrade my software, but souncds like a good tip, im going to try it today as a matter of fact thanks.

jaker_wvu
01-10-2011, 06:50 PM
Notice the post dates (2006-2008)? Back then we had 10-20x the amount of server space that we do today, and so we had room for plenty of photos (back when I was a newbie newb). The photos were pruned (where ryan goes in and sets a date, prior to that, all photos uploaded on the site are removed). Also, it was on a different site altogether (can't remember the name of that site at the moment) and SRO's upload feature was quite different (and I think all photos uploaded through that feature were deleted along with quite a few others). Heck, the photos I posted of the RSX and MX6 are also gone, although I might manage to locate versions of those on my servers or online somewhere, who knows, I might even have a copy on one of the computers in my room!!!

cts_incorporated
01-11-2011, 06:10 AM
Yeah i missed the date, doing alot lol. COuld i get those pictures i want to see exaclty how it looks for when i start producing videos.

jaker_wvu
01-11-2011, 08:28 AM
http://i55.photobucket.com/albums/g127/EndlessCreations/IMG_0839.jpg

http://i55.photobucket.com/albums/g127/EndlessCreations/chevy_likearock_shrinkimg.jpg

http://i55.photobucket.com/albums/g127/EndlessCreations/penningtonlibrary1.jpg

INDY 500 PHOTOS (from my time at Borg-Warner, got free tickets to the '08 500)

http://i55.photobucket.com/albums/g127/EndlessCreations/GodBlessAmerica.jpg
http://i55.photobucket.com/albums/g127/EndlessCreations/DoubleChecker-1.jpg
http://i55.photobucket.com/albums/g127/EndlessCreations/AtTheYMCA.jpg
http://i55.photobucket.com/albums/g127/EndlessCreations/AngiesList5.jpg
http://i55.photobucket.com/albums/g127/EndlessCreations/Indy500Crowd.jpg
http://i55.photobucket.com/albums/g127/EndlessCreations/Menards20.jpg

Don't remember the exact specs, only that those were all shot (the INDY 500 ones) with a Minolta Maxxum 7-series in full manual mode, with a Sony Alpha 500+mm high zoom lens through a doubler. The exposure was somewhere between 1/100 and 1/250 for most, although a few were shot closer to the 1/60 end of the spectrum. All that on 400 ISO 35mm film.

The remaining ones were shot with a Minolta Maxxum 9000 AF in manual focus, using full manual, and an adjustable 4'-8' tripod.

http://i55.photobucket.com/albums/g127/EndlessCreations/580495-R1-00-1A_001.jpg
Basic, multi-exposure, 2/3 background, 1/3 foreground. This isn't an editing trick; I set the camera to not advance the film, allowing me to expose the film twice, producing the ghost image. REALLY neat trick if you combo it with a drag launch and staging or launch and downtrack combo.

http://i55.photobucket.com/albums/g127/EndlessCreations/ChevyPickupFX2.jpg
While ideally your photo should be as good as you can get it when it's shot, it isn't always the case; this is where editing comes in handy. This is a sepia tone effect, then edited to adjust hue, saturation, and brightness/contrast for ideal.

http://i55.photobucket.com/albums/g127/EndlessCreations/ChevyPickupNBarn.jpg
The original image, as it looked when uploaded. I think it looks decent, but the sepia and adjustments gives it "character".

http://i55.photobucket.com/albums/g127/EndlessCreations/pickuptruck4.jpg
Another decent shot of mine ... "now you see it, now you don't". Could use some editing, but it isn't half-bad.

http://i55.photobucket.com/albums/g127/EndlessCreations/mazdamx6.jpg
VERY long exposure, late at night, with the streams from traffic. Done to death, but still, a decent shot. btw - these will take HOURS of hue, saturation, bright, and contrast adjustment to get "just right". The film tends to pick up a greenish-tinge to everything in comparison with how it "should" look, and you'll have to select individual elements, adjust their color to correct, and then blur it so the lines can't be seen. Took me 4 hours to get this one "just right".

http://i55.photobucket.com/albums/g127/EndlessCreations/mazdamx6_2.jpg
Once again, tripod, 2-second exposure, on a side-street. I find 2 seconds works good for areas like that, where it's 25mph for passing traffic, as it gets a blur for time/speed effect, without getting to the point that the passing cars are unidentifiable.

http://i55.photobucket.com/albums/g127/EndlessCreations/MX6Angle2_sig2UPLOAD.jpg
Basic sig image. Not too hard to pull off...

ROADTRIP TO TEXAS:

http://i55.photobucket.com/albums/g127/EndlessCreations/Westbound_Eastbound%20and%20down/100_0278.jpg
Nice image of a sweet old diner down in ... ummm ... Oklahoma.

http://i55.photobucket.com/albums/g127/EndlessCreations/Westbound_Eastbound%20and%20down/100_0282.jpg
Yes, I wore race shoes the whole time. Who doesn't??? :)

http://i55.photobucket.com/albums/g127/EndlessCreations/Westbound_Eastbound%20and%20down/100_0116.jpg
Stopping off for some Coors' beer ... didn't truck it back East of Texas, mostly b/c I was "technically" east of Texas in Arkansas, but it was still bootlegging, lol.

OTHER RANDOMNESS...

http://i55.photobucket.com/albums/g127/EndlessCreations/TeamXXX/camaro1.jpg
Nice little camaro wheel-stand. Was out there for the import day, but there were a few camaros and firebirds still.

http://s55.photobucket.com/albums/g127/EndlessCreations/ModifiedImaging/?action=view&current=240drift.jpg
I honestly took around 3 rolls of film, 36's too (got 41 out of a 36 roll) and this was the ONLY one that came out half-decent. Not an easy thing to photograph, especially at almost an eighth of a mile.


I easily have another 10,000 good (usable) photos, just that these were the first that I found.

cts_incorporated
01-11-2011, 03:53 PM
Nice very nice, im very young in the industry so i definatly thank you for the help. It's giving me a definite insight on how to go about stuff, i love street racing but i might be falling in love with streetracing.org