In this video produced by Tim Robbins and Snap Happy: the Photography Show, I share some of my techniques for capturing intentional motion blur from a moving car and present tips for processing these images in Adobe Lightroom Classic.
Hi Julieanne, thanks very much. It’s amazing. This is the essence of creativity: making something from nothing! Love it! I did something similar by panning flying birds with a slow shutterspeed: https://adobe4642.myportfolio.com/bewogen-vogels. Kind regards, Peter
By Haya Gray - 9:10 AM on December 20, 2023
Wonderful images. Why do you have to sit in the back? Can’t you get the same photos from the driver sit?
Also, What shutter speed do you set your camera on?
By Julieanne Kost - 9:01 AM on January 2, 2024
Thank you. Yes, I could have sat in the front, but it would have been more difficult to film me shooting. : )
My shutter speed ranges based on the speed of the car and the distance to the object that I’m trying to lock focus on, but often I set it to 1/15 or 1/30 of a second.
Hi Julieanne, thanks very much. It’s amazing. This is the essence of creativity: making something from nothing! Love it! I did something similar by panning flying birds with a slow shutterspeed: https://adobe4642.myportfolio.com/bewogen-vogels. Kind regards, Peter
Wonderful images. Why do you have to sit in the back? Can’t you get the same photos from the driver sit?
Also, What shutter speed do you set your camera on?
Thank you. Yes, I could have sat in the front, but it would have been more difficult to film me shooting. : )
My shutter speed ranges based on the speed of the car and the distance to the object that I’m trying to lock focus on, but often I set it to 1/15 or 1/30 of a second.