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Thread: Help on those windy days

  1. #1
    Ron Miller
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    CT, USA
    Posts
    552

    Help on those windy days

    Okay, it's March in CT and windy enough every day to vibrate the bellows. I usually don't shoot on windy days but the heck with that, I'm layed off and wanna spend some time shooting. I know some of you use umbrellas. Anyone have a favorite that they can share? Or other ideas?

    Thanks,
    Ron

  2. #2

    Join Date
    Dec 2009
    Location
    Berlin
    Posts
    51

    Re: Help on those windy days

    Hi Ron,

    I found umbrellas to be pretty useless. Half the time the wind is coming from the front, and you don't want to cover the lens with the umbrella The other problem is, that wind is changing direction lots of time, especially amidst buildings. And the worst thing: wind comes in gusts - if you have a large umbrella, like a golf umbrella, it can easyly be that you are tumbling and touch the camera with the cane, it happened to me more often than a vibration free shot with successfully shielding the camera.

    So I do not use umbrellas anymore, and search for windshielded spots instead.

    Another idea that came to my mind because often there is no shield was to buy a high tent and just build that around the camera. Has anyone ever did this?
    Thomas Birke
    blog -> http://thomasbirke.com
    portfolio -> http://www.birke.net

  3. #3

    Join Date
    Oct 2005
    Location
    Michigan
    Posts
    914

    Re: Help on those windy days

    Folks here have a lot of tricks for dealing with wind and weather; some of that wisdom has been shared in older threads.

    I use a 6 by 8 foot blue tarp. Once composition and focus are achieved I place a short side of the tarp upwind near the tripod and stand on those two corners. The other end of the tarp is extended above the camera and those corners are held in either hand. I usually have the cable release in my left hand and in some situations I have to resort to holding the upper left corner of the tarp in my teeth. It's not elegant - particularly the moment just before tripping the shutter, with the tarp stretched taut and teeth clenched tight, trying to maintain slack in the cable release - but I have taken super sharp photos in 45 mph winds.

    I sometime anchor my tripod to mother Earth if conditions warrant. I use a Gitzo with a hook in the short center column. I carry a piece of 3/4 inch flat webbing that can be adjusted to various lengths with a three-bar slider. One end of the webbing is attached to the Gitzo hook and the other to the middle of my backpack. The backpack is placed on the ground between the tripod legs and the loaded with rocks, or whatever is available. Finally, the webbing is shortened until taut.

  4. #4

    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    Austin TX
    Posts
    2,049

    Re: Help on those windy days

    If I can work near my vehicle (SUV with back that opens) then I'll back it around so the front faces into the wind and set up close to the open back. Works very well for most situations. Now I'm making a wind shield for one side which attaches to the upright back door and stakes into the ground for really windy situations. If hiking, I seek out wind sheltered spots and use tripod bracing and weighting to reduce camera motion.

    Nate Potter, Austin TX.

  5. #5

    Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Location
    Kalamazoo, MI
    Posts
    637

    Re: Help on those windy days

    I got a Wind Stabilization kit for my ULF camera, and seems to work very well.
    van Huyck Photography
    "Searching for the moral justification for selfishness" JK Galbraith

  6. #6

    Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Location
    Here, there, and everywhere
    Posts
    124

    Re: Help on those windy days

    Make photos of rocks, not grass.

  7. #7
    おせわに なります! Andrew O'Neill's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Location
    Coquitlam, BC, Canada, eh!
    Posts
    5,150

    Re: Help on those windy days

    A stabilizer kit is very helpful. I also hold up my dark cloth to shield the wind if it is coming at the side of the camera. I try to release the shutter between wind gusts. Forget about umbrellas. They are designed for rain, not wind. I HATE shooting in the wind, especially with long lens attached and all that bellows exposed flapping around.

  8. #8

    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Joyce, Washington
    Posts
    1,437

    Re: Help on those windy days

    I like the big golf umbrellas, I'm often carrying one anyway for the incessant rain here. Held one handed over the shoulder, it's mostly braced by my back and neck, so I can still use a shutter release or lens cap and not worry about loosing control of the umbrella.

  9. #9

    Join Date
    Mar 2002
    Location
    St Paul Mn
    Posts
    81

    Re: Help on those windy days

    I'll second the ice house idea. There are also some pretty light compact hunting blinds. In a pinch I like to park the truck on the upwind side.

  10. #10

    Join Date
    May 2009
    Location
    Texas
    Posts
    628

    Re: Help on those windy days

    Wait. And wait. And wait for the wind to die down for an instant.

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