There’s a Simple Rule for getting the Great Snowboarding Photos
To a few people, a trip out to the hills for some snowboarding on virgin areas of powder snow is not all it can be until there is a camera in tow snapping great snowboarding photos for their Facebook friends. It sounds like a simple enough thing to want. Until you actually try it. When it’s freezing cold, getting things with great care, so that you can snap, some great pictures that are deserving showing off can be a bit of a challenge. That’s why every ski resort employs quite a few professional photographers who will for quite a hefty fee follow you around to take pictures of everything you do. Is that what you need to do to get the pictures you really want – spend as much money on a photographer as would buy you a new camera? If you go in prepared for it, and if you’re willing to give every shot a little time to compose itself well, it really can be done.
Here’s everything you need to know to get great snowboarding photos without hiring your own personal photographer.
The biggest problem carrying a costly and delicate gadget like a camera out into the rough and unpredictable world of a ski slope is that it can fall into the snow, get wet and get destroyed. The initiative thing that you need to do to prepare for your snowboarding photos would be to pick the correct kind of camera. Don’t bother packing that DSLR. When your hands are frozen or covered in gloves, those fussy small buttons aren’t going to do you any favors. Try to select the smallest and best featured point-and-shoot you can find that you can just stick in your pocket. Slim cameras are far easier to pull out of the jacket pocket with gloves on than a big camera that can get stuck in your clothing. And find one that has the largest shutter button possible (and no touch screens). Since subzero temperatures can drain batteries very rapidly, be sure that you carry an extra battery.
If what you chose is not among those tough rugged cameras that can take being frozen or being dropped in snow, make sure that you get one with a nice strap that will keep it safe on your wrist. Plus, you can place the camera in an inside pocket with the strap hanging out. You can easily retrieve the camera by giving the strap a tug, and the camera’s battery life will do great when the camera kept warm on your body. One of the best methods to get great snowboarding photos out on the slopes would be to ride on a snowmobile or a sled. Of course, a DSLR would do great with the wonderful vistas you are likely to go by. However, you do need to remember that the main thing to getting great pictures out on the slopes depends on finding a way to keep your fingers pliable enough that they can operate a camera. Everything you plan to do with photography on your snowboarding trip needs to revolve around how you plan to keep your fingers warm enough to operate a camera. Once you have that down (and you remember never to use a flash around snow), you should do great.
