From the course: Landscape Photography: Waterfalls
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Triggering the remote shutter release
From the course: Landscape Photography: Waterfalls
Triggering the remote shutter release
We're on a nice sturdy tripod, we've got a sturdy ball head, so we've got the gear to stabilize the camera. But what happens when you touch the camera? Every time you touch it, you move it a little bit, and that's why we have a remote shutter. I'm able to take images without actually touching the camera. One of the very important features is continuous motor burst mode. You often see that associated with shooting wild life or shooting sports, but it's extremely valuable for photographing water. And the reason is, water is always different. When you're photographing water, even at the same shutter speed, each image will look different. And we want to have a lot of choices. We want to go back in Lightroom and see ten different images, even though they're all taking at eight tenths of a second. So, being in burst mode, I'm able to hold this down and the shots will continuously take place. Now, if you want to take one shot, you can, you hold it down once but anytime you get to a shutter…
Contents
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Scouting a location for the waterfall photo1m 1s
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(Locked)
Reviewing the gear needed to shoot moving water3m 18s
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Using the acronym HIPS for water shooting1m 23s
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Composing the waterfall shot1m 29s
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Setting the exposure for the waterfall shot5m 45s
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Triggering the remote shutter release1m 2s
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Checking for sharpness in the shots in the field1m 53s
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