Thanks Lucas - very helpful. I particularly like the idea of b&w 19th
century type shots - I must dig out some of Leni Riefenstahl's pre-war ski
photos, which are great.

--
Cheers,
 Bob 

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Lucas Rijnders [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> Sent: 03 January 2006 09:19
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: Skiing with cameras...
> 
> Op Sat, 31 Dec 2005 21:58:39 +0100 schreef Bob W 
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> 
> > ...wise or foolish? Discuss.
> 
> Wise. Always combine hobbies, when possible :o)
> 
> > I'm going skiing for the first time at the end of February. 
> I expect 
> > the Alps to be alive with the sound of the James Bond theme within 
> > about 5 minutes of me strapping the planks to my feet.
> >
> > Anyway, I will take a couple of film cameras. I assume that it is 
> > unwise to ski with a camera round my neck, but presumably I could 
> > carry one in a small backpack, next to the parachute.
> 
> If you can keep a generally upright position when skiing, a 
> camera around your neck (in your jacket) would not be a 
> problem. That said, I usually keep it in a backpack. If it's 
> the first time, in a backpack would certainly be preferable.
> 
> > I imagine also that it will be quite
> > difficult to take pictures with ski gloves on.
> 
> Yes. One modus operandi is to go before your travelmates 
> (assuming you have them, and want their pictures), stop 
> somewhere, stick sticks into ground, put gloves on them, get 
> camera, prefocus, wave to travelmates, wonder why the 
> bastards are not paying attention, wave again, take picture 
> as they ski towards you one by one. Try to picture them in a 
> turn. For a more dramatic angle, lie down. Beware of 
> travelmates trying to spray you with snow when lying down. 
> Medium telelenses (70-135mm) are fine for this kind of 
> pictures. Both the procedure and the pictures get boring 
> after a while...
> 
> Photographing from the side (when they pass you) is possible 
> as well, but harder. You get the slope of the mountain in the 
> picture, but risk unsharpness due to movement. Some tricks 
> from general action photography (like panning etc.) might help.
> 
> > Does anybody have any experiences, hints and tips about 
> Alpine-style 
> > photography that they'd like to share, please?
> 
> Pictures in gondola's (the smaller 6-12 person ones) can be 
> fun too: lots of colors, and you can actually see faces. Very 
> close quarters, so use a wideangle lens. Other types of lifts 
> (chair-lifts, etc) can be good motives (lots of repetition), 
> but not when you're riding them (bad point of view)...
> 
> Keep watching the landscape (very possible to make 
> 19th-century looking B&W photo's), and don't hesitate to pose 
> people (ski's in hand and all) before dramatice backdrops: 
> it's too easy, very cliché but makes for great pics ;-)
> 
> The alps might be one place where UV filters are actually usefull.
> 
> > --
> > Thanks,
> >  Bob-Claude Killy
> 
> You wish!
> 
> --
> Regards, Lucas Zurbriggen
> 
> 
> 
> 


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