


And an unusual hate relationship with our swing??
And an unusual hate relationship with our swing??
The receiver locks onto the cameras hot shoe and the receiver can be mounted on a tripod with the flashgun on top. Its easy to use and the results can be fantastic. If you remember my past post with Alex on the Harley, (below) those images were all taken using two radio transmitters with Nikon flashguns.
I love what I do. The challenges I face day to day is what motivates me to do better. It can become hard to make something great out of virtually nothing but that's a skill one has to develop. It's important we don't become to reliant on setup shots to get ahead so spot or hard news is essential in keeping all tools in the shed sharp (when one can get it)
I have been told in the past that kiwis photogs are the masters of setups but I hope I don't earn a rep for heading down that road. Having said that, here is a few to checkout.
This is what I do 40hrs a week and I love it. Its only been about four and a half years but it would have to rate as the best job ever. Its challenging, drives you to improve not just the quality but the eye and the mind. One minute you're shooting girl guides selling biscuits and the next you're at a murder scene or natural disaster and hey, variety is the spice of life. Photography is the ticket so what better way to develop the craft than to be out there every day snapping at everything that moves and my personal work has shot ahead in leaps and bounds as a result. How many of us get a job actually doing what we love??, well I only know one person who would fit that bill.
I have just read a column in the Photographer Mail about US Journo photog Jim McMillan (Interesting read if you get a chance). This guy is the real McCoy (unlike my gig with a small town community paper) and has been kicked, punched, tasered, was shot in the head, survived two car bombs, 3 road side bombs and on many occations having to shelter from shelling and small arms fire.