In the images below notice how the race cars are clear and crisp but the rest of the image is blurred to show the motion of the race cars. This effect was accomplished by panning. Panning can be used with any fast moving object.
In order to pan
successfully set your camera on a slow shutter speed and follow your subject’s
movement and match it’s speed and direction as perfectly as possible. The faster
your subject is moving the more difficult it is to pan. Panning requires lots
of practice.
Tips for Successful Panning:
Panning requires a steady
hand and a fairly slow shutter speed.
The actual shutter speed
depends on the speed of the subject but usually it will be 1/200th or slower.
1/200th if your subject is really zipping along, like these speeding cars, and perhaps
as slow as 1/40th of a second if your subject is a runner on a track.
ACURA by e_walk |
When you’re first learning how to pan, don’t slow your shutter down too much. Just keep it slow enough to begin to show some motion. As your confidence increases and your images start to look good, go ahead and slow your shutter more and more to show even greater motion. This will separate your speeding subject from the background.
Make sure your subject
remains in the same portion of the frame during the entire exposure. This will guarantee
a crisp, sharp subject.
It’s difficult to keep
your subject in the same portion of the frame if it’s moving faster than you
are. Start with something fairly slow and advance from there. Again – lots
of practice.
When I first tried my hand
at panning, I went to a park that had a beautiful old merry-go-‘round. I
practiced photographing the horses as they made their stately and gracefully
circles. They were moving at just the right speed for a beginner.
Most importantly - have
fun learning this new skill. You will succeed!
Check out my prior post on photographing fast moving subjects and how to keep the entire scene in sharp focus.
Check out my prior post on photographing fast moving subjects and how to keep the entire scene in sharp focus.
All photos above are distributed under the Creative Commons License. Thank you to the photographers for allowing their images to be used by others.
We'd love to see your photos showing panning or sharp focus photography. Post them in your comments section. Open a comments box, click on the + symbol in the left corner and follow directions.
Happy clicking!
We'd love to see your photos showing panning or sharp focus photography. Post them in your comments section. Open a comments box, click on the + symbol in the left corner and follow directions.
Happy clicking!
10 comments:
Amazing shots! Thanks for this tutorial - I'll be trying it!
Wow!
You're amazing my dear :)
Nice tips should try this sometime .
something that I have to try...cool..
This is a fun one!
Brilliant advice as always! Definitely going to try giving this a go :D
Happy to know this will help you.
The photos aren't mine, but the tutorial is :)
I bet you'd love this and be really good at it!
With DD on the move I do think this will come in handy :)
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