Hello ! That’s some cool shots right there . I got a question tho, I'm an wildlife photographer at base but i start gettin into motorsport/cars photography, i already have a cpl to avoid reflections etc.. but is a ND really usefull ? Or a hybrid cpl ND like you actually use ? Cause i think i can’t stack my filters on one another, thank you and keep the good work Goin 🔥
Its useful, sometimes situational and sometimes a requirement. For instance for motorsports I'd say it's pretty essential. Shooting at f8+ is a good start to getting motion blur but if it's 2PM in the summer, you are going to need more help than that to really capture the feeling of speed in a photo, an ND filter would be greatly beneficial. If you're at a car meet it's more of a situational creative tool, you could (assuming you have a variable ND filter) set it to its lowest stop and get some motion blur of cars coming and going, can make your images stand out. Or you can take photos of cars sitting still and get the motion blur of people walking by / around the car. If you're just getting started I wouldn't worry about it too much at car meets / photoshoots. but when you get the chance to take photos on track, you will want it.
im looking to get into car photography and general photography as well, i dont really have an understanding of how and when to use certain things like aperture and all that, but im learning, and im curious what you think is a good first camera, im curently looking at a used sony a6000, do u have any suggestions or thoughts on that camera?
a6000 is a great camera and a good open door to the sony E mount lens family. Personally I'd recommend a Nikon D5300 or an older Canon DSLR. Nikon and Canon DSLRs have been around for so long the used market for lenses is massive so its a little bit easier to get your hands on multiple different lenses to try while you find your style. There are also adapters you can buy to fit canon lenses to the sony e mount cameras. Worth checking all of that out.
@@jacob-pina I got lucky that my dad was a photographer for a few years. Has an old D200 with a 17-35mm, 50mm prime f1.4, 105mm macro f2.8, a 28-70mm (broken AF and fungus), and a 85mm f1.8 prime with broken aperture blades sadge. Been primarily using the 50mm and 105mm macro for 95% of my photography atm until I can upgrade to a sony a6700 with a few primes.
@@empanada420 Depending on the fungus the photos might come out pretty cool lol. Get weird with it one day and see what happens, could be a blessing. All the others sound great! You're extremely lucky getting a 50 1.4! Whole setup sounds like it bangs.
I’m new and wanna get into photography, been watching a lot of video but why change the shutter speed? When you took the picture of the Honda it was at 1/320 but when taking a picture of the wing it was at 1/1000
There is more light in the image to allow higher shutter speeds. I think he does this to get the sharpest image possible. Lower shutterspeeds requiire you to be more stabile while shooting. Also might just be a lighting preference.
I changed the aperture as well, it went from being f/4 to f/1.8. and I did it to get more of a blurred background in comparison to the wing. But changing from f/4 to 1.8 also means that more light is getting to the sensor. bringing it down to 1.8 means my photos is going to be super blown out 1/320. I bump up the shutter to adjust for the amount of light my sensor is getting. This is just one option, I could have also lowered the ISO to 100 as well. If you want the sharpest image possible, bringing down your ISO is a much better option than bringing up your shutter to adjust for more light. I'm not printing these pictures, so min maxing quality wasn't something I was worried about, I was just running and gunning
Of course! If you have a crop sensor it might be a little hard at car meets because of how far back you need to stand to get things in frame. But you can use any lens for car photography.
you deserve more views and interactions, your work is beautiful🙌
ps. your tattoos are cool!
Nice pics, nice cars, nice channel, subbed
Really informative and interesting video - cheers
This is so sick bro
Hello ! That’s some cool shots right there . I got a question tho,
I'm an wildlife photographer at base but i start gettin into motorsport/cars photography, i already have a cpl to avoid reflections etc.. but is a ND really usefull ? Or a hybrid cpl ND like you actually use ? Cause i think i can’t stack my filters on one another, thank you and keep the good work Goin 🔥
Its useful, sometimes situational and sometimes a requirement.
For instance for motorsports I'd say it's pretty essential. Shooting at f8+ is a good start to getting motion blur but if it's 2PM in the summer, you are going to need more help than that to really capture the feeling of speed in a photo, an ND filter would be greatly beneficial.
If you're at a car meet it's more of a situational creative tool, you could (assuming you have a variable ND filter) set it to its lowest stop and get some motion blur of cars coming and going, can make your images stand out. Or you can take photos of cars sitting still and get the motion blur of people walking by / around the car.
If you're just getting started I wouldn't worry about it too much at car meets / photoshoots. but when you get the chance to take photos on track, you will want it.
@jacob-pina that’s nice to know, thank you ! 👌
im looking to get into car photography and general photography as well, i dont really have an understanding of how and when to use certain things like aperture and all that, but im learning, and im curious what you think is a good first camera, im curently looking at a used sony a6000, do u have any suggestions or thoughts on that camera?
a6000 is a great camera and a good open door to the sony E mount lens family.
Personally I'd recommend a Nikon D5300 or an older Canon DSLR. Nikon and Canon DSLRs have been around for so long the used market for lenses is massive so its a little bit easier to get your hands on multiple different lenses to try while you find your style.
There are also adapters you can buy to fit canon lenses to the sony e mount cameras. Worth checking all of that out.
@@jacob-pina thanks man, will do, appreciate you responding!
@@jacob-pina I got lucky that my dad was a photographer for a few years. Has an old D200 with a 17-35mm, 50mm prime f1.4, 105mm macro f2.8, a 28-70mm (broken AF and fungus), and a 85mm f1.8 prime with broken aperture blades sadge. Been primarily using the 50mm and 105mm macro for 95% of my photography atm until I can upgrade to a sony a6700 with a few primes.
@@empanada420 Depending on the fungus the photos might come out pretty cool lol. Get weird with it one day and see what happens, could be a blessing. All the others sound great! You're extremely lucky getting a 50 1.4! Whole setup sounds like it bangs.
I’m new and wanna get into photography, been watching a lot of video but why change the shutter speed? When you took the picture of the Honda it was at 1/320 but when taking a picture of the wing it was at 1/1000
There is more light in the image to allow higher shutter speeds. I think he does this to get the sharpest image possible. Lower shutterspeeds requiire you to be more stabile while shooting. Also might just be a lighting preference.
I changed the aperture as well, it went from being f/4 to f/1.8. and I did it to get more of a blurred background in comparison to the wing.
But changing from f/4 to 1.8 also means that more light is getting to the sensor. bringing it down to 1.8 means my photos is going to be super blown out 1/320. I bump up the shutter to adjust for the amount of light my sensor is getting. This is just one option, I could have also lowered the ISO to 100 as well. If you want the sharpest image possible, bringing down your ISO is a much better option than bringing up your shutter to adjust for more light. I'm not printing these pictures, so min maxing quality wasn't something I was worried about, I was just running and gunning
You should try mounting it to your chest so we can get a view of the cars in front of you rather than a top down shot of the camera while shooting
What lens filter are you using?
1st lens is a K&F ND 2-32 CPL combo filter, other lenses are just standard K&F CPL filters.
I have 50mm f1.8 can I use it for car photography?
Of course! If you have a crop sensor it might be a little hard at car meets because of how far back you need to stand to get things in frame. But you can use any lens for car photography.
@@jacob-pina thanks man love ur vid👍
The shot at 2:34 is vertical yet you were shooting horizontal? Did you just crop the horizontal photo into a vertical one?
Yep! Just a square crop since the focus was on the rear and I didn't get the whole car into frame anyway.
What kind of POV camera are you using?
GoPro hero11 black with a head mount so it's basically in the middle of my forehead lol.
are those all raw or you've edited them?
These have been edited. If I did another video like this would you like to see the raws too?
@@jacob-pina of course man!
@@jastinandrei6269 You got it bro, I'll show both next time.