For those interested, I've posted some pictures I took from the trial in the preliminary runs. The link is:
http://www.pbase.com.../bluegrass_2003
There you can find thumbnails of the larger images if you want to view them.
What a great trial it was!
Denise
Pictures from the Bluegrass 2003
Started by
Denise Wall
, May 21 2003 01:38 PM
8 replies to this topic
#2
Posted 21 May 2003 - 03:53 PM
Wow. Great pics.
Andrea
Andrea
#4
Posted 22 May 2003 - 03:04 AM
I did darlin'. Please please can I have a copy? I was SO proud of him for making the top 20!
Andrea
Andrea
#5
Posted 22 May 2003 - 07:16 AM
...so don't keep us hangin'....tell us about Joe!!!
Diane
Diane
*************************
Diane Pagel
DeltaBluez Stockdogs
www.deltabluez.com
www.deltabluez.blogspot.com
www.dynamitemarketing.com/deltabluezstockdogs
Carnation, WA
************************
Diane Pagel
DeltaBluez Stockdogs
www.deltabluez.com
www.deltabluez.blogspot.com
www.dynamitemarketing.com/deltabluezstockdogs
Carnation, WA
************************
#6
Posted 22 May 2003 - 12:11 PM
Denise,
Great shots! At last I've identified someone else with intersecting interests in sheepdogs and photography. Your photos were obviously taken with a shutter speed that is beyond the capabilities of my digital point'n'shoot - do you use a digital SLR (or scan from 35 mm film)?
I love shooting digital, but my efforts with sheep and sheepdogs have been hopeless because action photography of any sort with a non-SLR digicam (the only type currently in my price range) is virtually impossible. Lack of significant telephoto capability is also a major limitation when it comes to trial photography, of course. I do own a film scanner, but I'm lazy about using it as it is old and slow. I lust after the nice new ones, but those in my price range are either crappy, slow (USB), or not yet compatible with Mac OS X. I know I'll end up with a digital SLR, but I'm waiting until resolution goes up a bit and prices come down a lot. For now, I should probably put my money into a fast telephoto lens and try to be patient during film scans!
Anyway, long story short - if your shots are happening with a non-SLR digicam, I would love to know which one!
Sincere apologies to others for whom this was a boring and off-topic post.
Cheers,
Christie.
Great shots! At last I've identified someone else with intersecting interests in sheepdogs and photography. Your photos were obviously taken with a shutter speed that is beyond the capabilities of my digital point'n'shoot - do you use a digital SLR (or scan from 35 mm film)?
I love shooting digital, but my efforts with sheep and sheepdogs have been hopeless because action photography of any sort with a non-SLR digicam (the only type currently in my price range) is virtually impossible. Lack of significant telephoto capability is also a major limitation when it comes to trial photography, of course. I do own a film scanner, but I'm lazy about using it as it is old and slow. I lust after the nice new ones, but those in my price range are either crappy, slow (USB), or not yet compatible with Mac OS X. I know I'll end up with a digital SLR, but I'm waiting until resolution goes up a bit and prices come down a lot. For now, I should probably put my money into a fast telephoto lens and try to be patient during film scans!
Anyway, long story short - if your shots are happening with a non-SLR digicam, I would love to know which one!
Sincere apologies to others for whom this was a boring and off-topic post.
Cheers,
Christie.
#7
Posted 22 May 2003 - 12:19 PM
Joe was the man. He made the double lift but Scott elected to run his other two dogs Tala and Pleat. That's my (ex) baby!
Andrea
Andrea
#8
Posted 22 May 2003 - 05:16 PM
Andrea,
I'm happy to let you have any of the pictures I took of Joe. I have at least three or four. Email me.
Christie,
Thanks for your kind words. The camera is a Nikon Coolpix 5700. It's considered a "prosumer" camera, not a DSLR, though definitely not a point and shoot. It's a 5 mega pixel camera and the in-camera zoom is quite good at 35 to 280 mm. I can get shutter speeds up to 1/4,000 of a sec. Most of those on the link were shot at around 1/1,000 of a sec. It will also do a three shot per second continuous burst mode that I use quite a bit for action shots. It's small enough and has the "whole package in one" enough to carry around everywhere. I love it.
Denise
I'm happy to let you have any of the pictures I took of Joe. I have at least three or four. Email me.
Christie,
Thanks for your kind words. The camera is a Nikon Coolpix 5700. It's considered a "prosumer" camera, not a DSLR, though definitely not a point and shoot. It's a 5 mega pixel camera and the in-camera zoom is quite good at 35 to 280 mm. I can get shutter speeds up to 1/4,000 of a sec. Most of those on the link were shot at around 1/1,000 of a sec. It will also do a three shot per second continuous burst mode that I use quite a bit for action shots. It's small enough and has the "whole package in one" enough to carry around everywhere. I love it.
Denise
Denise Wall
Stilhope
Stilhope
#9
Posted 23 May 2003 - 05:04 PM
Thanks very much, Denise.
Christie.
Christie.
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