I began my newest schedule today. I should be happy that I get to wait until 10 to go into the office, but the cats are going to wake me up at 6:00 regardless of when I have to leave the house, so I’m still working 13-hour days as far as I’m concerned. I don’t mind that too much, but I can’t stand coming home when it’s dark.
Couldn’t even go for a walk this morning because it was raining. True, I could have walked in the rain. I didn’t feel like it.
Work wasn’t all that hideous today because I spent a lot of time rebuilding a little excel-based program that I wrote a few months ago. I’m trying to do the whole thing in Visual Basic with a secured back-end database so that the rest of my team can use it to do software upgrades and I won’t have to worry about them somehow getting to the code and screwing everything up. At least when I’m developing something I’m not bored to tears.
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A Furman defender goes after the runner. The clarity in this picture – from the shoes to the facial expression, blew me away. I love this camera. |
Furman dropped their game at App State last Saturday, but it was closer than most people had predicted (33-28, ASU). More importantly, the camera that I rented for the game was everything I’d hoped it would be and more. I actually used it at a high school game on Friday night and was amazed at the quality of the shots I got. High school football games are a sports photographer’s nemesis because they’re almost always at night, the lighting at most high school stadiums sucks, and the team that you’re shooting is invariably in some dark color like maroon or navy blue. You can shoot in manual at about 1600 ISO and set the shutter speed to a relatively slow 1/250, but your shots are still going to be blurry and lacking much detail. They’ll probably have a lot of noise in them, too.
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Furman’s Jerodis Williams tries to hurdle a linebacker. At 10 framers/second, I could sit back, frame my shots, and blast away. |
The Canon 1Dx that I rented, however, has incredibly good high-ISO quality. I shot the high school game at 20,000 ISO – which allowed me to have a shutter speed of about 1/600, and the resulting photos have virtually no noise whatsoever. I was stunned and couldn’t wait to see how the camera would perform at a fairly well-lighted college stadium. It did not disappoint. With the ISO problems solved for the end of the game (when it did get dark), and with the camera blasting out 18-megapixel photos at 10 frames/second, I felt like I could just concentrate on framing and focusing and let the camera take care of everything else. Turned out to be a good plan – I got hundreds of really nice shots. I gave about 35 of them to the Greenville News and put 91 others into my own slide show.
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Ray Early watches his extra point attempt go right down the middle |
I got an email from the News’ sports editor today telling me that he was very pleased with my work and asking if I’d shoot the Furman/Citadel game for the News this weekend.
I think I mentioned in my previous post that I didn’t make a great deal of money for the ASU game. I figured out during the drive home that, if I didn’t count what I spent on lens and camera rental, then I made just under $2/hour (after paying for gasoline) for the 18 hours I worked last Saturday.
Even so, being asked by a relatively major paper to shoot another game made me extremely happy this afternoon, and I agreed to shoot the next game. I may never get a job as a “real” photographer, but the G’News is at least giving me a shot to string for them a little while – truly my dream job – and I’m just going to run with it as far and as hard as I can. Maybe something will come of it, and maybe nothing will, but I have an opportunity.
The brass band played a concert at the University of Georgia about a month ago, and we got our recording of the concert back last week. I am normally the first guy to hold his nose and cringe when listening to recordings made by my band, but I’ve got to admit that we made some really nice sounds at UGA. One track in particular is virtually mistake-free, well in tune, and beautifully balanced. I’ll try to put a copy of it into this blog at some point. It’ll definitely be up on the band’s website within the next few days.
I mentioned that I paid off my car last week. Naturally therefore, the Audi in question started making horrible noises at me when I backed it out of my garage after lunch today. I’m hoping that it was just a case of having some water on the brakes or something, but – knowing my luck – it’ll probably end up being the first step towards having a blown engine or something along those lines. You know: something that will cost me $3000 to fix and that will make my car completely worthless as a trade-in if I don’t fix it.
And that’s enough typing for tonight.