December 15, 2008 at 9:19 pm
A hearty well done to everyone from the staff, to pilots and to the volunteers of Air Atlantique Classic Flight, and not forgetting the fire crew, for a very productive and very enjoyable couple or three hours. Roll on the next one. Many thanks to Steve as well for the lift from the main gate to the car park.
First time at night shooting and was quite impressed with what I came away with despite the duff/soft ones due to the camera moving during the longer shutter speeds.










A few more Piccies HERE
Brian
By: rossi1 - 17th December 2008 at 14:14
lovely tribute on G-TM
By: sgtwickool - 17th December 2008 at 12:40
My favourite photo is this one from you’re site : HERE
I agree, beautiful photo of the chipmunk. Great work!!
By: PMN - 17th December 2008 at 00:23
Absolutely superb work, Brian. Very, very nice indeed. Thanks for sharing these, I enjoyed them immensely. 🙂
Paul
By: Student Pilot - 17th December 2008 at 00:02
Goiter problems maybe?
By: DGH - 16th December 2008 at 19:14
Great photo’s Brian, glad you enjoyed it. 🙂
This was a first for us and we are open to suggestions and comments in order that we can make any future events even better.
My favourite photo is this one from you’re site : HERE
By: Pen Pusher - 16th December 2008 at 07:44
There were a few camera flashes going off Darren but it doesn’t seem to have been a problem. At least not for me.
There was somebody standing next to me, as we were doing the DC-6, using an in-built camera flash and couldn’t figure out why his pictures were coming out a bit dark. 😀
Brian
By: darrenharbar - 16th December 2008 at 06:52
Nice shots Brian. Good to see they were not ruined by other photographers flashguns (which can be a real pain on night shoots).
By: Pen Pusher - 15th December 2008 at 21:49
Thanks for the above, Brian, excellent as always. I’d booked my tickets and was looking forward to the event, but had to cancel when my wife fell ill.
Any gen on shutter speeds /ISO ratings used ?
I’m a great believer in letting the camera do all the work rather than faffing about with apertures and shutter speeds. I turned the programme dial to ‘Night’, turned off the flash and set the ISO to 100 which meant some very long shutter speeds. The Dak with props turning ended up as 8 seconds and the Venom was 3.2 seconds. A sturdy tripod and a remote shutter release are essential.
Brian
By: Arabella-Cox - 15th December 2008 at 21:45
Gorgeous! 🙂
By: 91Regal - 15th December 2008 at 21:39
Thanks for the above, Brian, excellent as always. I’d booked my tickets and was looking forward to the event, but had to cancel when my wife fell ill.
Any gen on shutter speeds /ISO ratings used ?