You may be
aware that the British Dinghy Cruising Association has created a competition to
go alongside ones for the best technical article and best cruising log in its
journal. This new competition centres on photography, videography and artwork
with monetary prizes in the form of Amazon vouchers.
DCA website:
https://www.dinghycruising.org.uk/news/dca-launches-a-photo-competition
An article I
wrote for the DCA journal about the competition is published instead as a PDF download on their website and can be found in my previous blog post. At
the end of that post, I promised that I would also post answers to two further
questions, which being very specific about photography, probably weren’t appropriate for
inclusion into the journal or on the DCA website
These two
questions were:
• What equipment can I use to
get a ‘pleasing’ dinghy cruising related photograph?
• What basic photographic skills would
I need to develop in order to obtain this photo?
If you have
read the article/first blog post and are now feeling inspired but left wondering
whether or not you have the right camera gear (you do by the way), then perhaps
this section below will help you further.
What
equipment can I use to get a ‘good’ and suitable dinghy cruising related
photograph?
Simple
answer – any practically any camera you have as a good photo comes from the
skill and knowledge of photography employed, not necessarily the actual camera
used. In saying this however, there are some things to consider and I discuss
these in the context of my own camera equipment. Let’s start by looking at what camera
equipment I carry on Arwen (figure 1).
Figure 1:
what photographic equipment do I carry on Arwen?
As
standard:
·
GoPro
Hero 9 on long selfie pole (plus spare batteries and various mounts etc)
·
Two
GoPro Hero 5’s and assorted mounts/fittings (plus spare batteries etc)
·
Sony
HX-90 compact digital optical zoom camera (plus spare batteries) in waterproof
pouch and dry bag
·
Spare
micro-SD memory cards which can fit any of the cameras) – minimum 64Gb class 10
·
Camera
cleaning kit – cloth, lens spray, puffer brush)
·
Clamp
mounts for GoPro
·
Mini
Gorillapod tripod for compact zoom
·
One
portable power bank
·
Either
a Camera rucksack or a camera strap bag – On a small boat, you may find a
rucksack too bulky, so a shoulder bag is better. On shore, I keep the latter
securely on me by slinging the strap over my left shoulder and across my chest
front so that the bag lies on my right hip as I am right-handed. Everything is then
secure and easily accessible. Contents are in small waterproof drybags which
are labelled on the outside. In the boat, I have it all in a small photographic
rucksack, inside a large drybag.
·
Lens
wipes – I use them rather than the bottom of my fleece (We have all done it!)
Occasionally:
·
DSLR
Canon 800D plus 18 – 55mm F/4.0 and 55 – 250mm F/4.5 zoom lenses (spare
batteries)
·
Lightweight
full-sized tripod
·
Spare
lens caps
·
UV
filters on lenses - protects them from scratches, salt and spray
·
Circular
polarising filters for both lenses – great for sunny days - eliminates unwanted
glare off the water, saturates colours and increases the contrast between the
different elements in a shot
·
Lens hood prevents light flaring on lens and
protects camera against accidental knocks.
Very
occasionally – for
astrophotography
·
Above
camera plus Samyang 135 mm F/2 lens
·
Skywatcher
Star Adventurer 2i pro star tracker
·
Benro
carbon fibre full tripod – you can get very cheap second hand tripods off
Facebook marketplace etc - a tripod
allows you to use telephoto lenses in low light on a DSLR - stability without camera shake when you
need wider apertures and longer shutter speeds but no flash.
·
Samsung
Galaxy Tab A tablet
·
If
you are taking photos at golden hour from land – get a remote shutter release
cable as well to avoid any camera shake when taking a photo.
My compact
zoom camera (a Sony HX90 – also a great vlogging camera by the way) and GoPro
Hero 9 (for those exciting spray over the coaming/raining moments, when a small
waterproof camera is needed or for getting those good close-up shots of crew in
action) are the two main cameras I carry regularly onboard. My smartphone,
a middle of the road one with ok-ish images (but not ones that could be
enlarged for printing off) lives in an aqua-pouch when onboard so effectively eliminating
its function as a camera. Occasionally
in relatively sheltered inland waters like the River Tamar, I take my bigger DSLR
although I rarely use it when actually sailing. One handed DSLR camera photography
is something I’m unlikely to master any time soon.
A recent ‘digital
camera beginners’ course’ enabled me to ‘get off auto’ and ‘engage
with ‘manual’’ on both my compact and DSLR cameras. My Canon 800d DSLR with
various kit lenses gives me the most choice, control and quality over images. DSLRs
(and mirrorless cameras) give very high-quality images, are bigger and easier
to hold, have larger rear touch screens and relatively quick autofocus. Great onshore, or if you are in a boat not helming
or crewing; impossible to use well if you are ‘active’ in the dinghy. If it
isn’t a weatherproof one, they aren’t great with saltwater spray! Mainly used when I have finished sailing and
am moored or dried out, the DSLR accompanies me on shore explorations and is my
astrophotography kit for night time. I can choose aperture, shutter speed, ISO
and control depth of field and focus. Tack sharp background or bokeh blurred?
This kit gives me those options.
An
alternative to the DSLR is a ‘bridge’ camera. It is mid-way between a
point and shoot compact and a DSLR. It has a tripod thread, a flash shoe and
control over exposure, aperture, shutter speed and ISO (light sensitivity).
Visit the ‘Lone kayaker’ website at https://thelonekayaker.wordpress.com/ to see one used well. All of Rupert’s images taken from his kayak are on
a bridge camera which he stores inside a dry bag!
Figure 2 gives some reviews of bridge and DSLR cameras on the market today. If you chose
a bridge camera or DSLR – find one which has a dial or buttons to manually
control exposure, ISO, aperture etc. Trying to access a menu on a screen with
wet fingers is a disaster waiting to happen!
Avoid digital zoom as any image done this way will lose sharpness and
stores little information for later post processing. You want optical zoom!
Figure 2: reviews
of DSLRs and bridge cameras (I take no responsibility for the quality of the
reviews)
Best entry
level DSLRs 2022
https://www.techradar.com/uk/news/best-entry-level-dslr-camera
https://photographylife.com/best-entry-level-dslrs
and slightly
more generally https://www.t3.com/features/best-entry-level-camera
bridge
cameras
https://www.digitalcameraworld.com/uk/buying-guides/the-best-bridge-cameras
https://uk.pcmag.com/digital-cameras/85599/the-best-bridge-cameras
The Sony
HX-90 digital/optical zoom compact gives me great picture quality, a x 30
optical zoom lens, a flip up backscreen and inbuilt flash. Small and lightweight,
it almost does what my DSLR can do. Most sailing days I’m happy to get this out
of its waterproof storage bag to take photographs at its widest lens opening
and I can use it one handed. I can shoot in RAW mode (better for post editing,
enlarged prints and magazines) and I avoid ‘digital’ zoom which degrades the image
quality. Bobbing about on waves and trying to do telephoto zoom shoots with it
are just never going to happen, so I use it on its widest focal length and best
quality settings; enabling me to then crop the image in post editing without
losing image quality. Of course, it’s now dated, overtaken by action cameras
and waterproof smartphones and newer compact cameras, but it still does the job
and I’m sentimentally attached to it as it was a gift given to me when I
retired.
Those who
know me well know I am an action cam – GoPro aficionado! There are many good action
cameras available now and my previous articles on vlogging in the DCA
journal and also posts on this blog give a good overview of these. Personally,
I only use GoPro or DJI Action for photographs and I favour action cams with a
front screen that shows me what I’m photographing when using for selfies (it’s
also a vlogging advantage). My various
GoPro’s have been bomb-proof over the decade I have been using them. There are
plenty of YouTube videos about settings for your GoPro camera and figure 3 shows what photo settings I have for my Hero 9. Remember on any camera or
advanced smartphone, RAW format gives you best quality images and plenty of
options for creative post editing.
Magazine editors prefer RAW as well!
Figure 3: my
GoPro photo settings for Hero 9 Note - it has a fixed aperture of F/2.8
Photo – linear, Superphoto, timer 3s, zoom
1.0x, WB – auto, sharpness – low, colour – GoPro
Night
photo – wide,
shutter – 30s, RAW, TIMER – 3S, ZOOM 1.0X, wb – 5000K, ISO min – 800, ISO max –
1600, sharpness – low, colour – flat
Burst
mode – wide,
burst rate – auto, output – standard, timer – off, zoom – 1.0x, WB – auto, ISO
min – 100, ISO max – 3200, sharpness – high, colour – GoPro
Use self
timer – if you want to be in a shot. Touch zoom slider can bring a closer view
of the action.
My GoPro
excels at those really big landscape shots (choose linear mode) and those
onboard boat close ups. Avoid super wide settings (distorted fish eye results
with curved horizons) and don’t use them for distant shots – they were never
designed for telephoto images. You just won’t be able to crop in effectively
during post production editing!
Now, I am
going to be slightly vague here because I have to confess, I have never owned a
decent smartphone. SWMBO draws the line at expensive smartphones. Mine is a
lower middle end smartphone, non-waterproof, but which does reasonable images.
Great for social media but not much else. It gets used mainly for navigation
and texts and that’s it. Great for wide angle images, upmarket smartphones now
do great telephoto shots as well but the risks of dropping it overboard?
Getting it wet? I’m not that brave given the higher costs of the better
equipped phones. If you are braver than
me, then your high-end smartphone should do portrait and landscape mode, render
good flash and allow a fair degree of manual control over exposure and some settings
like aperture. Some will blur the background whilst keeping the subject of the
image pin sharp. Several even allow you to ‘magic away’ distractions in your
photos. And of course, they are great for spontaneous use; after all, we carry
our smartphones with us everywhere.
Figure 4
gives some websites that review waterproof compact digital cameras and smart
phones
Figure 4: reviews
of waterproof digital compact cameras, digital zoom cameras and waterproof
smartphones (I take no responsibility
for the quality of the reviews)
Best
waterproof digital cameras:
https://www.digitalcameraworld.com/uk/buying-guides/best-waterproof-cameras
https://www.techradar.com/uk/news/best-waterproof-camera
https://www.amateurphotographer.co.uk/buying-advice/top-12-best-waterproof-and-underwater-cameras-164057
Best budget
compact digital zoom cameras:
https://www.digitalcameraworld.com/uk/buying-guides/best-compact-camera
https://www.digitalcameraworld.com/uk/buying-guides/best-point-and-shoot-cameras
https://www.techradar.com/uk/news/best-compact-camera
Waterproof
smart phones;
https://www.digitalcameraworld.com/uk/buying-guides/best-waterproof-phone
https://www.techadvisor.com/test-centre/mobile-phone/best-waterproof-phone-3789597/
https://www.tomsguide.com/uk/best-picks/best-waterproof-and-water-resistant-phones
If you have
an existing compact, bridge or DSLR camera here are some quick tips to help
maximise the image quality in your photo. Firstly, more pixels do not necessarily
mean better quality pictures. It is sensor size which is important. The more
information your sensor holds, the bigger you can enlarge a photo when printing
it off. Secondly, if you are buying a new camera, get a reputable make – Canon,
Nikon, Sony etc. Thirdly, APS-C on DSLRs means it is a crop sensor but it will
do absolutely fine. Full sensor size DSLRs are very expensive!
Fourthly, no
surprise here but salt water smears lenses lens and rusts metal fittings! Some
DSLRs are not weatherproof. Those that are tend to be very expensive. Protect
your DSLR by getting a giant zip lock freezer bag, cutting a hole for the lens
to poke through, sealing the camera in the bag and securing the bag opening
over the lens with a thin stretchy elastic band. Well, that’s how I do it. For your compact, if it isn’t a waterproof one,
you can buy water proof pouch bag specifically designed for optical zoom lens
compacts. Make sure you get one that can accommodate your compact on its full
optical zoom lens stretch – go on – ask me how I know that’s important!!
Invest in a good brand if you buy an
aqua pouch for your compact or smartphone. Cheaper versions leak – go on,
ask me how I know – again!!! Put two little bags of desiccant into any bag
that holds a camera or smartphone – they absorb any moisture trapped in the
bag.
Ok, so at
this point we have briefly discussed basic photographic equipment
considerations. Now a public service health warning – go no
further unless you want to learn how to get off ‘Auto’ mode and into ‘Manual’
mode on your camera, smartphone or action cam. The last bit of this blog
post finishes by examining some very simple, basic, beginner principles about
shooting photographs. This is just for those who like me dream of getting
off ‘auto’ camera mode just once in their lives!
Our final
question:
What basic photographic skills would
I need to develop in order to obtain that ‘good’ photo?
If you haven’t done so yet, I would strongly urge
that you read the article in the DCA journal or the first blog post about the
competition and what makes a ‘good’ boat photograph. By doing
this, the following will then make better sense! The article looks at what
makes a good photo and discusses aspects to do with composition.
Some pre trip
thinking about camera settings is very important. If you want the best
possible quality photographs for inclusion in a magazine or to enlarge as
prints of 8” x 10” or above, shoot and save
images in RAW format but expect some post editing in a photo editing
software program afterwards to get the best out of the image. RAW format images
give you the most information and detail.
If you want
photos for a personal album, a blog or an ‘Instagram’ post, JPEG’s are
perfectly fine and take up less room on your memory card; just dial in the
highest quality JPEG setting your camera can do. My DSLR, GoPro and compact
camera can shoot both simultaneously. My smartphone shoots JPEGs only. Newer smartphones can shoot in both JPEG and RAW.
Quick warning reiteration – RAW images never look as good on your rear-view
screen as JPEGs do – but after post processing – oh my do they pop then. Always,
always select the best/highest quality megapixel resolution/ image size setting
your camera can do. It will need a bigger memory card but will be worth it.
Magazine editors by the way, will love you for that choice!
And talking
of these worthy individuals, resist any temptation to digitally auto enhance
any images you take for magazines. Let the editors and their team do it as they
know what they are looking for and what will best fit their page layouts.
Your camera on
auto setting will give you good pictures straight away as it selects
the optimal exposure, shutter, aperture and ISO speeds. Don’t be afraid to use
auto mode at sea. In lower light or where you are suffering camera shake,
select TV (shutter) mode as it allows you to choose the shutter speed. The
camera will then automatically select the most appropriate ISO and aperture
settings to get you a correct exposure at that shutter speed. However, I like
to exert greater control and thought over exposure and focus in an effort to
really boost image quality and detail, and so I have been familiarizing myself with
manual, shutter and aperture modes on my cameras. It is not within the scope of
this article to give detailed advice about camera settings but getting off ‘auto’ is fun and there are plenty of
YouTube tutorials explaining how to adjust shutter and ISO speed, aperture and
exposure compensation. Look up ‘The exposure triangle’.
On some
compact zoom cameras and most DSLRs, either via a dial or through a menu set up,
you can select from M (manual), AV (aperture), TV (shutter) or P (auto) modes. By
now, you are beginning to realise that there are three things to consider
in getting a well exposed photo: shutter speed, aperture and ISO. So,
let’s look at each of these a little more closely, through the context of this
‘Exposure triangle’.
Shutter
speed is how
long your shutter remains open and is measured in seconds or fractions of
seconds e.g. 1/60th, 1/500th. Fast shutter speeds freeze
action e.g. water splashes and spray over the deck and let in little light;
also good to use if using long telephoto lenses or shooting fast moving boats.
Long shutter speeds (shutter is open longer) allow more light onto the sensor. Turn on the camera’s image-stabilization
system and you can shoot at slower shutter speeds (1/15, 1/8, or 1/4 of a
second) to keep the boat in focus while blurring the water. The latter
technique is easier toward sunrise and sunset, when light levels are lower.
Changing the
ISO (sensor sensitivity) will capture more or less light. The higher
the number you choose, the more light it captures, but at a cost. The higher
the ISO, the ‘grainier’ the picture will become! To capture images of boats sailing, set your ISO speed to between 100 –
400. For example, on bright sunny days choose a low ISO around 100 because
you have plenty of available light. On an overcast day, you might set it to
400. Remember, don’t go higher though as this will lead to a ‘grainy’ picture
and that is something you want to avoid. High ISO speeds do however, allow faster
shutter speeds. (See shutter speed above).
Your choice
of aperture (how wide open your lens diaphragm is to let light
through) determines how much of your shot is in focus. A wide aperture, (the
smallest ‘f-stop’ number) allows a fast shutter speed and more light through,
thus reducing motion blur. It ‘freezes’ any action and gives a shallow depth of
field (only the subject is in focus, the rest of the image may be blurry). Increasing
the aperture (a higher F number) brings in more motion blur, less light but
more depth of field so the background comes into focus more. In low light, use a wide aperture (a small F
stop number) and a slow shutter speed but remember you will need to use a
tripod or prop your phone/camera on something to hold it steady to avoid shake
blur. I would also set a shutter timer delay (on most phones and cameras) so
that when you press the shutter button, the camera delays taking the photo for
a few seconds so that any camera shake settles down before the image is taken.
If you want
that ‘looking along the length of the boat’ shot to be in focus from foreground
to background then you need a big depth
of field so select aperture priority mode on the control dial and set aperture
to between f16 - F22. The bigger the f/number, the bigger the depth of field.
The camera will automatically set shutter speed and ISO appropriate for the
day’s conditions. If I wanted just the boat’s foreground in focus but the background
blurred (called bokeh), I need a small depth of field, so apertures of f8 or
below. A good general shooting setting
for reasonable depth of detail across your image is f8 - f16.
You can read
more about the exposure triangle here at:
https://petapixel.com/2017/03/25/exposure-triangle-making-sense-aperture-shutter-speed-iso/
Diagram 1 –
the exposure triangle. This diagram shows the simple relationship between
shutter speed, aperture and ISO and what impacts altering each has on depth of
field, grain and sharpness.
For a good
video explanation try this one from PhotoPills
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WA8JGwnxjBw
And for
smart phone camera users, this may help as well: https://thesmartphonephotographer.com/exposure-triangle/
Remember, it
sounds complicated but once you have your head around the basics, it becomes
easier to understand. If you want to move onto manual – practise onshore before
trying it for the first time from a boat!
Some quick tips about other settings, mainly on DSLR cameras. If you
are using a DSLR camera to take a photograph of a boat, from another boat, keep lens auto focus and image stabilization switched on. If you want to keep the moving boat
permanently in focus switch your camera autofocus mode from ‘One shot’ (or
AF-S) to ‘Servo’ (or AF-C) and this will allow you to half press your shutter
button to continually focus on the approaching boat until you are ready to take
the shot.
I set white balance to auto when saving
RAW images as I can alter them in most post editing software programs and if
truth be known, trying to remember to manually set up my camera for the correct
white balance every time I take a shot is beyond my limited brain capacity. My friend,
saves in JPEG’s, and chooses a white balance option mode from his camera menu, suited
to the conditions on the day - bright sunlight or cloudy skies. Remember out on the water, the sky, water,
sails and hull may be over bright so familiarize yourself with how to alter
your exposure compensation if using a DSLR. When your camera’s light
meter reads ‘0’, then exposure is correct. +1 means the image is over exposed
(too bright) by one stop. Conversely, -1 on the meter tells you that your image
is under exposed (too dark) by one stop.
If you have
worn polarising sunglasses at the seaside, you know that glare disappears, and
in clear water, you can see the sandy bottom, the seaweed and scuttling crabs
with startling clarity. A polarizing
filter on my DSLR lens achieves the same thing, reducing glare, removing
unwanted reflections and intensifying the blues and greens in the scene. It
also makes white fluffy clouds really pop in bright blue skies. Be aware that
the filter will often reduce the light entering the lens and so if shooting
in aperture priority mode, your camera will slow shutter speed slightly to
compensate for this. To ensure I get that ‘freeze the water’ shot, I have to remember
to raise the ISO setting a little higher.
Oh, and one
more thing, I turn off any date, time or
GPS location stamps that might imprint on the final image. An irritating
way to spoil a perfect shot!
When you
have got the images, it is time to take them back and process them. If you are
doing them for inclusion in a printed magazine, definitely talk to the editor
before processing your images. They may just want you to send them the RAW file
so that they can make editorial decisions about processing, cropping etc. If
you are wanting to print it and frame it, try not to amend the image too much.
Don’t over process it! Less is more! Do
just enough to keep yourself happy. Focus on subtle iterative adjustments to
exposure, contrast, highlights, shadows, clarity, vibrancy and saturation
(depending on the post editing program you use – I use Affinity photo). Use
Youtube tutorials to get better at the post processing skills.
If using a DSLR
or a GoPro you will do most of this editing once home. With a smartphone, there
are many apps which will allow you to do it there and then. Editing and posting
on the move – amazing!
What about
using a drone camera? You haven’t mentioned that yet Steve! Um, possibly with
good reason! On My drone I have some control over exposure, aperture and
shutter speed settings or I can just go auto! You’d better be a really good
drone pilot before venturing it out over water or taking off and landing on a
boat! Know exactly how long your batteries last and leave spare battery time
for possible tricky landings. Disable the ‘return to home’, ‘collision
avoidance’ and ‘distance limitation’ settings. On a moving boat, you
won’t still be where you took off, even if you are anchored! You
may need to grab it by hand on landing! So, wear protective gloves! Learn to
watch the screen not the drone and have an observer watching the drone
position. Take into account wave and wind conditions. Good drone shots include
looking vertically down on the boat, centred over the mast. Try not to over
expose your image. If you have polarising filers to fit the drone camera, use
them. Set exposure settings to the boat not the surrounding sea. Great location
shots are when the boat is anchored in a stunning bay in the evening and you
can fly the drone lower to catch the boat against the backdrop of a cliff and/or
beach.
And finally,
(well done by the way on making it this far), lets finish with a few more
useful tips. Ready to take a photo of
Arwen and armed with correctly set equipment and shot lists (see previous post),
I do try to ensure she is tidy and
clean and looking her best (tip
1). So many of the photos my friend
took of my boat last year were rejected because I’d forgotten to take in
fenders on the starboard side or allowed strands of reefing line and snotter
control halyards to dangle across my face. Worst was my display of poor
seamanship skills, through a sail with a huge clew to throat crease. So, no
baggy sails, no loose lines, no cluttered cockpits and no dragging fenders; just
a tidy, clean, boat displaying a good turn of speed, full sails and water
flowing serenely along its hull. If only!
My planned
‘shots’ list for the day serves as a memory aide but I won’t stick rigidly to
it. I will develop situational awareness
(tip 2) from the start by sitting back a while before shooting and taking a
look around the sailing area I’m passing through. If I’m crew in another boat
shooting other peoples’ boats, I’m looking for those unusual shooting angles as
the boats sail around me. I try to anticipate
what boat and helmsperson might do on different reaches and tacks and also look
for those unscripted interactions between helmsperson and boat which show their
sheer joy in sailing their own boat. Some
images of crew intently engaged in ‘action’ such as raising a sail,
commencing a tack or furling a jib capture ‘movement’ that conveys the sense of
a boat being ‘under way’. My previous post gives further ideas.
And lastly,
a plea about safety (tip 3). Even in an anchored boat, it’s one hand
for yourself and one hand for the boat. Keep your camera on a short neck strap
so, if need be, you can quickly let it go to use two hands for safety. Try to shoot
from a seated position so there is less chance of slipping or being a MOB
casualty and wear appropriate grippy footwear, deck shoes or yacht boots. With suitable clothing and sunscreen for the
day easy to hand, always wear your life jacket or PFD as well.
I hope
across the two blog posts you now have all that you need to help you go out
there and get some really good photographs of your dinghy and of those
belonging to other dinghy cruisers. Don’t be shy, if you think they are ‘good’
shots, then enter them for the Dinghy Cruising Association photography
competition. Details on the DCA website, given at the start of this blog post.
Good luck
now, fair winds and see you out on the water.