Movement Photography
After looking at other peoples photos on the internet and looked round other peoples setups for this type of photography i decided that i would need a external flash for my camara for it to work best. For this i used a Jessops 360AFD flashgun, this allowed me more control over my flash.
Once i had my setup perfected i then went about trying different types of water dropping, from simple water drops using water all the way to doing the effect using coffee and milk. For all of these shots i used around 1/200 for this as well as a aperture of around 14. I also set my flash to 1/16 so that the photo was not over exposed. As well as all of these measures i also shot everything in RAW, this allowed me to not have to worry as much about things such as white balance as this could be corrected in post processing, to do this i used Adobes Lightroom and Photoshop software.
Below are some of my different attempts at this type of photography.

To do the photo above, i used a variation of the water technique. Instead of just using water i used water with flour to add thickness and then food colouring for both of the dropping water and also the base water.

This photo was done using the traditional water dropping technique using water dropping onto more water in a baking tray. For this i used 2 flashes, the onboard flash and a external flash. This was then put into Adobe Lightroom were it was cropped and also had the exposure lowered slightly as the photo was slightly over exposed. This was easily done because of shooting in RAW.
This photo is using another type of movement, instead of using a high shutter to freeze the action like above i used a low shutter speed to blur the action to show movement. To do this i set my focus point on the car and panned the camera as the car moved this made the car to be in focus while the background was blurred to show movement. For this shot i used a zoom lens (18-105) this ideally could have been done with a telephone lens or a long prime to get the car more sharper but i did not have these available to me.
For the shot below i used a shutter speed of 1/80 and a aperture of F13 the reason for this was 1 so that the image was not over exposed because it was a sunny day and 2 so that most of the car as possible would be in focus. No fill flash was used on this shot and was all natural light.

I like this shot because of how the way the shot has been taken by the house it looks like the driver was going really fast when in reality he was going quite slow. The shot is also framed like it is a long straight so would reiterate the sense of speed when really just off camera there was a large bridge and drivers were only coming of it slowly.
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