In my years of aviation photography, I have learned a ton by just simply watching what professional and top amateur photographers do. Yes, I have been shooting way long time ago in the Kodachrome era as a child in the mid 1970s but all this has helped me tremendously in shooting natural without the help of HDR, excessive photoshop, cropping, etc. Here are a few things that I learned to look for trying to get the best possible natural shot.
1. Sunlight is important. Try to shoot in low sun especially early morning or late afternoon. The one good general rule is that all the wheels must be lit up in sunlight. That tells you that the proper angles are there. Watch out for too low of sun which turns yellow and can get the shades of the photographer and other things in the way.
2. Remove unsightly things.......tow bars, covers (canopy, engine, pitot tube), cones, oil cans, and anything else around the plane. When you do a setup for someone, you are in control of the photo. All these must be removed for a professional-level shot. The only thing I may allow is a wheel chock, but place it in the back wheel furthest away from you and try to get one with a black color to blend in - but if you don't need it, don't use it.
3. Ugly ramps. One of the most important things is the ramp. It is oily? Does it have manhole or rain gutters in the foreground? Are the ramp cracks too deep and too strong where a big line gets in the way? Positioning the plane in the cleanest ramp possible is very important to get away from unsightly things that can stand out and ruin your photo. Never try to set the plane perpendicular to a line or crack as that will be highly seen in the shot. Oily ramp is a problem at OPF (Opa-locka Airport in Miami) - great planes but ugly ramps full of oil.
4. Background. Try to position the plane with the cleanest background possible. Avoid other parts of planes sticking out behind your main subject like a tail from the nose making it look like a rhino etc. Also look out for electrical poles, light poles etc.
5. Try lower angles, sometimes shooting from your stomach. These are great shots and giving space underneath the plane is a very nice shot.
6. Watch your shade. A photographer's shade in the foreground is very unprofessional even though the plane may look good. Angle the plane and your position so that YOUR shade is not visible.
7. During night shooting, try to do something to give the entire plane some light, whether using remote lights or building lights. Do not use too long of exposure because background lights "expand" or "fog out" and then begin to cover your plane. When shooting night airliners on a ramp try to get to a location with plenty of light. Just lighting on the tail but a dark fuselage is not that good. You need full light on a plane. Sometimes while shooting bizjets, I can use the headlights of my car and that will work. Make sure they are not too strong. Also, having the interior lights on works real nice. You can go steps further and set up remote flashes behind the wheels but BE CAREFUL when a plane has engines on because things can get sucked in. Also, careful shooting props or helicopters. If you set up remote lights, they can get sucked into a prop or rotor damaging it. Use common sense.
NEVER use flash for turning props or rotors. They freeze the action.
8. Have fun - EXPERIMENT WITH DIFFERENT EXPOSURES AND POSITIONS. After all, a setup is likely your call so you are in control. Avoid high sun shots. Plan things out with the customer to get that good sun angle or night light.
9. And don't forget, for running props, lower that shutter speed!!!! If hand held go lower than 1/250 or use a tripod for lower speed on setups!
10. Avoid excessive fisheye lens shooting. These make planes look like gliders. Although artsy to a few, they are also nuisances to seasoned collectors of images. Wider angles like these are good for cockpit shots, cabin shots, airport shots, or control tower shots as examples.
11. Interior photos - like those of bizjets - try to do them at night or in a dark hangar but with the natural interior lights on. Doing them during the day can bring in unwanted sunlight into some seats and tables making it look ugly. Cockpit shooting should also be at night and without a flash as flashes will white out a glass cockpit or window. Put the camera on a tripod and give it a few seconds with the natural interior lights and all instruments on.
If anyone wants pointers on position shooting and setting up planes for a photo shoot, please feel free to drop me a line. I like sharing my ideas with serious photographers.
FernandezImaging