Size isn't everything
September07200702:15 PM
This is an illustration to disprove the sentiments I
(and my fellow photographers) have heard many times
about how having a long lens must make for great
pictures. It does -- as long as you're in place
before the action, have a nice, clean background, and
(at least in my case) a fairly quick and accurate
autofocus. Where a long lens sings is stopping action
with a minimal depth of field, making a subject "pop"
in focus against a background that's intentionally
left out of focus. We want to see the jubilation of
victory or the sweat of exertion on the athlete's
face, not the spectator eating a hot dog behind her.
What goes into making that great picture is knowing
what's going to happen before it does -- where the
play is headed, which player is likely to react when
she scores a point, who's in position to dive for the
ball. A moment too late means the ball is out of the
frame and the picture is unusable. A moment too late
and that foot of focus is misplaced, caught on the
net or a player's arm that's swung into the frame, or
the crowd behind the player. In this case, the camera
first focused on the high contrast of the advertising
behind the player and was slowly moving to the
players when the peak action, the moment I was hoping
for, happened. Two frames later, I have a nice sharp
frame of these two young women, watching as the ball
sails toward the net.
A long lens is definitely a great tool for shooting sports, but equally important, I've found, is practice. It's knowing the game well enough to know where to point and focus that lens before the action happens. It's knowing the limits and strengths of the tools you work with and how to use them to capture the moments that are meaningful, no matter the setting. It's not making great pictures because of the tool, it's making great pictures with the tool.
--Sara Gettys
A long lens is definitely a great tool for shooting sports, but equally important, I've found, is practice. It's knowing the game well enough to know where to point and focus that lens before the action happens. It's knowing the limits and strengths of the tools you work with and how to use them to capture the moments that are meaningful, no matter the setting. It's not making great pictures because of the tool, it's making great pictures with the tool.
--Sara Gettys