Stock Shot: Some photographers develop test negatives before they'll move the tripod after a shot. They know full well the many factors which might go out of balance to spoil an important shot. And you should mull these things over, too, before you promise rush delivery of a picture, no matter how simple.
Suppose the publisher of a trade journal in the poultry field, or one of his advertisers, needs a picture of a hen surrounded by a flock of chicks. To hire a photographer to shoot such a picture might cost him fifty or a hundred dollars and involve weeks of delay. He could buy the same shot from Stock shot, from a picture agency or a photographer who specializes on poultry, for five or ten dollars and get the print immediately.
In the shot put a heavy metal sphere is propelled from a circle seven feet in diameter; four feet of its circumference-in the forepart of the circle-contains a toeboard four inches high. In this event the shot is not allowed to pass behind or below the shoulder, so that technically it is "put" rather than "thrown." A 16-pound shot is used in major masculine competition, such as in the Olympic Games, national championships, and intercollegiate competition; the 12-pound shot is usually used by males in secondary schools, and the 8-pound shot is used in feminine competition, including the Olympic Games. In the games the shot put is also one of the 10 decathlon events for men. A put of over 65 feet has been made with the 16-pound shot, and a woman has exceeded 56 feet with the 8-pound shot.
You'll want to make a number of grab shots just before the ceremony . . . bridegroom and best man at their posts, bride on the arm of her father, bride and her attendants as they start down the aisle and at least one long shot during the ceremony. This one shot might well be a long shot of the entire assembly, taken from the back of the church by time exposure, with the Camera on a tripod.
|
|