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Posts Tagged ‘Hunting’

My Latest Interview: Finding Your Own Vision vs Hunting Trophy Shots

18 Jun

_N2A1604-Pano

My latest interview with Rick Sammon on the DPExperience podcast talking about landscape trophy shots & finding your own vision is now online. If you’re looking for some ideas on how to improve your photography I recommend listening. My discussion starts around the 41 minute mark. Enjoy and feel free to ask me any additional questions in the comments of this post. Have great day!

Copyright Jim M. Goldstein, All Rights Reserved

My Latest Interview: Finding Your Own Vision vs Hunting Trophy Shots

The post My Latest Interview: Finding Your Own Vision vs Hunting Trophy Shots appeared first on JMG-Galleries – Landscape, Nature & Travel Photography.

       

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Posted in Equipment

 

Big Game Hunting: The World’s 9 Biggest Board Games

21 Sep

[ By Steve in Gaming & Computing & Technology. ]

Biggest Game Boards
Board games may be old fashioned to some but they’re anything but boring no matter how big a board they’re played on. Here are 9 of the biggest.

Triple (Size) Letter Score

Biggest Scrabble Game Board 1

Biggest Scrabble Game Board 2

Biggest Scrabble Game Board 3

Popular word game Scrabble celebrated its 50th anniversary in 1998 and in honor of the occasion, two teams from the United Kingdom’s armed forces played the biggest Scrabble game EVAR, turning London’s Wembley Stadium into a ginormous Scrabble board. The reinforced fiberglass letter tiles measured 2 x 2 meters (about 6 feet per side) and were 40cm (almost 2 inches) thick, requiring two team members to shift each one into position… and you thought soccer was a slow game! On the bright side, just be glad Welsh words weren’t allowed.

Take A Walk On The Boardwalk

Monopoly in the Park 1

Monopoly in the Park 2

Monopoly in the Park 3

Do you know the way to San Jose? Make a left at Baltic and don’t forget to bring your Get Out Of Jail Free card! We’re talking Monopoly here; Monopoly In The Park to be exact. The 930 sq/ft permanent Monopoly board offers anyone a chance to make it big on Silicon Valley real estate. I want the iron… darnit!

Ukraine Not Weak!

Biggest RISK Game Board 1

Biggest RISK Game Board 2

Biggest RISK Game Board 3

Beloved by Kramer and Newman, RISK is the classic game of world domination where the board is as big as the world… or so the players wish! Everyone from be-suited gentlemen to cosplaying geek gamers has tried to imitate Vladimir Putin playing larger-than-life RISK but there’s a drawback: the bigger the board, the harder it is to take the game with you on the New York subway.

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Big Game Hunting The Worlds 9 Biggest Board Games

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[ By Steve in Gaming & Computing & Technology. ]

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Posted in Creativity

 

Photography Hunting – Play the Waiting Game with Kids

08 Jul

What is photography hunting?

I am a hunter. My prey, however, does not scurry through the woods, fly through the sky or swim in the streams. My trophies are instead moments, which I stalk, camera at the ready. When the time is right, the target is placed squarely in my sights. Click.

I’m constantly on the hunt for that fraction-of-a-second gesture, facial expression or scene that takes an ordinary photograph to the next level. Hunting can be tiring and a little like war, in that there are long periods of boredom interspersed with brief moments of excitement. But those moments of excitement and the superior images they provide are well worth this mental approach to photography.

Halloween

Seeing the potential for a nice Halloween silhouette, I waited at the bottom of the hill for several minutes until the perfect moment presented itself.

When I first began the journey of documenting my children’s lives, my methods for doing so were ineffective. Whether the scene was ‘created’ for the purpose of the photograph, or I caught my children in a natural setting, I would go after the end-result with a rapid-fire intensity, hoping one of the many images captured would result in success. Sometimes I would get lucky and catch the optimal moment with one of my stray shots. Other times, I would realize immediately before, or after, I’d pressed the shutter that the best frame had evaded capture. What an awful feeling it is to have your prize slip through your fingers, never to be seen again.

I would also try to control my subjects, in the hope they would appeal to reason and take requests from the man behind the camera. Sensing dad’s genuine desire to capture the moment, the little darlings would naturally do everything in their power to ensure I was unsuccessful.

Hat & Tie

Over time, my approach to photography evolved. Instead of aggressively spraying bullets into the woods, I now calmly sit back and monitor the scene. Rather than attempting to control the scene and my subjects, I now try to take the best photos the situation will naturally allow, without my overt intervention.

3

As with real estate values, photograph hunting hinges on location, location, location. Make sure to set up shop in the ideal location, so that when the moment arises, you’re not scrambling to get into position.

Know your subject

The first rule of photograph hunting is to know your subject. My subjects are two energy-filled kids, interested in anything but sitting stationary and smiling for dad. They have other things on their to-do lists and, if I ever hope to make decent photographs, my approach has to be the yin to their yang. If they are constantly moving and unpredictable, I have to be patient and watchful. If they refuse to pose, I have to fabricate poses using their natural movements and expressions. Essentially, I have to become a hunter, constantly focused on the situation.

Lower quantity – higher quality

Getting used to this alternative strategy may take time, but the transition can be relatively pleasant. Eventually, you won’t get as frustrated when that perfect moment slips away. But more importantly, because you’re strategically lying in wait for the right moment, fewer moments will slip by you in the first place. The days of rapid-fire documentation will gone, which means lower quantity, but higher quality. This reduction in the number of images produced has secondary benefits, in terms of processing time and data storage. Simply grab your camera, get into position, and wait patiently with the camera to your eye for that special moment when the stars align and the shutter goes click.

When the subject has no awareness of the photographer’s presence, the results tend to be more intimate.

A few photography hunting tips:

Camouflage

Become the wallpaper, so as to not influence your subjects’ movements and actions. You want them to be immersed in their own little worlds, as once they become aware of your presence and intentions, the entire situation can quickly unravel. Remaining an observer of the scene, as opposed to a participant within it, results in a more relaxed shooting environment, which fosters superior results.

Know your weapon

Know your camera and know the basics of photography so that you can quickly adapt to new light, positions and situations – without having to take the camera down from your eye. Too often, you will find that it is during those few seconds when you are not ready to take a photo, that the best photo opportunity will come and go.

The Hunter

Don’t fall asleep in your tree stand

Always maintain your mental focus. If you’re personally invested in the opportunity, and if the chance for a trophy photo exists, be ready. It’s amazing that such fleeting moments, which last mere fractions of a second, can have such long-term impact when viewed again and again. Stay focused on the subject so that when that split-second gesture, facial expression or scene presents itself, you’re there ready to capture it.

RMP_3336 - Version 2 (2)

Don’t spray and pray

Take fewer shots, with more precise aim. Put down the fully automatic in exchange for a nice, simple single-shot. Taking fewer photographs, that are each precisely timed and focused to hit the target, will result in more trophies hanging proudly on your wall, and will remove some of the post-process burden associated with sorting, editing and storing images.

Newsie

Photos don’t have to be 100% natural to employ the hunting technique. If I notice a scene with nice light, I’ll place my kids in the right position and watch them play until I see the ideal look or gesture.

Do you have any other tips for photography kids? Please share in the comments below, and show us your images as well.

Happy hunting!

The post Photography Hunting – Play the Waiting Game with Kids by Ryan Pendleton appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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Posted in Photography

 

Hunting Season

20 Apr

Ein Beitrag von: Rebecca Schwarzmeier

Ich bin in einer Gegend aufgewachsen, in der man vom Auto abhängig ist. Die nächste größere Stadt liegt fünfzig Kilometer entfernt. Und bis zum nächsten Supermarkt fährt man zehn Kilometer – durch den Wald.

Autofahren kann Spaß machen. Und ich gebe es zu, ich fahre gern. Doch nur allzu oft wird diese Freude durch Gefühle von Beklommenheit, Ekel und auch Trauer unterbrochen – nämlich dann, wenn da Tiere sind, tote Tiere.

In der Jagdsaison 2012/2013 zählte der Deutsche Jagdverband über 200.000 Wildunfälle. Aber wer ruft schon den Jäger an, wenn er einen Hasen überfährt? Und kleinere Tiere wie Igel oder Mäuse bleiben ohnehin unerwähnt.

Irgendwann war da dieser tote Fuchs, den ich sah, als ich meine Eltern besuchte, der tagelang am Straßenrand lag und an dem ich immer wieder und wieder vorbeifuhr. Ich hatte das Bedürfnis, diese Situation fotografisch aufzuarbeiten. Stehenzubleiben. Hinzusehen.

Hunting Season © Rebecca Schwarzmeier

Hunting Season © Rebecca Schwarzmeier

Hunting Season © Rebecca Schwarzmeier

Hunting Season © Rebecca Schwarzmeier

Hunting Season © Rebecca Schwarzmeier

Hunting Season © Rebecca Schwarzmeier

Hunting Season © Rebecca Schwarzmeier

Hunting Season © Rebecca Schwarzmeier

Hunting Season © Rebecca Schwarzmeier

Hunting Season © Rebecca Schwarzmeier

Hunting Season © Rebecca Schwarzmeier

Hunting Season © Rebecca Schwarzmeier

Hunting Season © Rebecca Schwarzmeier

Hunting Season © Rebecca Schwarzmeier

Ein Großteil der Serie ist im Frühjahr und Sommer 2012 entstanden. Als ich meinen Freunden davon erzählte, begannen auch sie, ihre Augen für diese Problematik zu öffnen. Fast täglich wurde ich angerufen, weil jemand auf dem Weg zur Arbeit an einem überfahrenen Tier vorbeigekommen war.

Im Herbst 2012 wurde die Serie im Rahmen der Ausstellung „Waldrand“ der Fotoszene Nürnberg gezeigt. Für mich ist das Thema aber längst nicht abgeschlossen; ich habe die Kamera immer im Kofferraum dabei.


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Huge Whitetail Deer hunting Canada 191″ Chambered for the Wild” with Jim Benton Saskatchewan

05 Jan

Jim Takes the largest buck he has ever shot on this hunt, 191″
Video Rating: 0 / 5

 
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Posted in Nikon Videos

 

My Favorite Hunting Knives

16 Nov

A short video of a few of my favorite hunting knives. Buck, Schrade Old Timer, Grohmann, and a couple others. Shot with my Nikon D90.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

After watching my good friend Stazima’s Halo 4 Beta Discussion video the other day it got me thinking about as and when we were likely to see the Beta and when it would be announced. Stazima’s VIdeo www.youtube.com This is not fact this is simply my opinions on how I’d like to see the Beta and Halo 4 be revealed at E3 2012 Follow me on Twitter www.twitter.com

 
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Photo Hunting in a Zoo: That’s Easy and Absolutely Legal

20 Oct

Animals photography is one of the most simple kinds of photography (at least beginner photographers think that there’s nothing but waiting and flicking). You don’t need to ask models to turn their heads to the right, to explain them how to strike poses for the camera. Animals don’t care about you – they just lay, jump and stare. That’s a Continue Reading
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Posted in Photography

 

D300 Focus Hunting Problem Comparison

10 Apr

I replaced my D300, the store was willing to take it back.