01-25-2020 10:18 AM
This weekend I am going on a whirlwind photo tour of the California Coast.
Mainly to get pictures of this:
https://www.experiencepismobeach.com/beach-and-outdoors/monarch-butterflies/
However, I think I will also take in this in Paso Robles:
I will probably be there after sunset.
Any ideas for images, settings and techniques?
01-25-2020 02:33 PM
@kvbarkley wrote:This weekend I am going on a whirlwind photo tour of the California Coast.
Mainly to get pictures of this:
https://www.experiencepismobeach.com/beach-and-outdoors/monarch-butterflies/
However, I think I will also take in this in Paso Robles:
I will probably be there after sunset.
Any ideas for images, settings and techniques?
Bring a tripod.
When it comes to sunrises and sunsets, you can get some of the best shots when the sun is just below the horizon, and is lighting up the underside of any clouds in the sky.
Also, keep looking behind you as the light changes.
Sometimes you can stunning shots of the sky with the sun at your back when the sun is just below the horizon, too.
01-25-2020 03:30 PM
I am going to be there an hour or so after sunset, so it will be totally dark.
01-25-2020 04:15 PM
@kvbarkley wrote:I am going to be there an hour or so after sunset, so it will be totally dark.
I switched devices and checked out your links. COOL! Take a tripod, anyway. Looks like an awesome experience.
01-25-2020 05:45 PM
Yeah, I had never heard of the Field of Light before.
I will have my travel tripod, not the best, but better than me. 8^)
01-25-2020 07:43 PM
I just read the website, no tripod's allowed. 8^(
01-25-2020 09:23 PM
@kvbarkley wrote:I just read the website, no tripod's allowed. 8^(
And what constitutes a "professional camera" in this context?
01-25-2020 10:10 PM
Hopefully not a Rebel. I hate weasely words like that.
01-26-2020 09:59 AM - edited 01-26-2020 10:04 AM
KV,
Probably too late.. Hoping you can take a 70~200 f2.8 and a 16~35 f2.8
I think a wide angle lens at the butterfly grove won't do as well as a zoom since you'll want to capture some detail at distance. The butterflies "cluster" themselves together. I visited one in Pasdena many years ago.
The 16~35 will do well capturing that sea of lights and be fast enough after dusk. But I'm not telling you anything you don't already know. Too bad about the tripod. I'm sure they get knocked over by the hoard. 🙂
Looking forward you your pics.
~Rick
Bay Area - CA
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01-26-2020 10:06 AM
@kvbarkley wrote:Hopefully not a Rebel. I hate weasely words like that.
This is where my M3 becomes handy. It is not much larger than a pack of cigarettes. The 22mm f/2 lens that I like to much is a pancake lens, and it gives the equivalent angle of view of 35mm on a full frame.
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