Flight of imagination
INNSBRUCK, Austria, January 5, 2014 - I first covered the Four Hills Tournament twelve years ago. Part of the men's ski jumping World Cup, it takes place in four legs - two in Germany, two in Austria. Apart from three years spent in Los Angeles, I have done this every season for a decade. Almost a routine.
But the key this time is that I was not working alone. With my colleague Samuel Kobani here to cover the main competition – I didn’t have to worry about the generic, have-to-have pictures - the finish line, the winner podiums and so on.
That gives you a certain amount of freedom.
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During training sessions you can shoot from underneath the ramp – which you can’t access during the actual competition. I didn’t have a monopod or a fish eye – just a zoom I was holding in my hands, pointed upwards and ready to catch the skier just as he flies into the air. With a 14/24 zoom you have to be careful to snap quickly. There’s no room to manoeuvre or crop.
But there is always an element of luck involved! I guess I was very lucky that day. The weather was really bad, and then when the skiers took their jumps it broke up a little bit, so you got the guys silhouetted against blue sky, high above Innsbruck and the mountains. A great panorama.
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I spent many years learning from my own mistakes. With the slow-shutter shots, it’s really about experimenting.
Here I was playing around with exposures of between one quarter and one tenth of a second. You are always hoping that you don’t screw up.
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I guess I used to experiment more than I should… Now I try for a more classical style – but I like to add this kind of ingredient from time to time. Like a cherry on top.
And when I have another guy with me I can afford this kind of stuff – that’s why it’s nice to be in a team!
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These ski jump competitions are pretty physical – lots of trekking up and down hills. The atmosphere is fantastic. That said you are thoroughly limited as a photographer. In Innsbruck there are big canvases blocking the wind that reduce the visibility from the spots we can shoot from.
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The organisers have made it difficult to get to the good spots – you are increasingly kept to standard places so you know exactly what pictures to expect. The only variables are the weather – and luck.
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Photography is a very humble sport – you never know what you are going to get. It takes you by surprise as well. You have to go with whatever’s happening around you – now it’s started snowing again, so maybe it will be good for some slow shutter action.
Today I was unlucky: I was not in the right position to capture a crash – by a couple of minutes. Oh - and another one - just now! Better get back to it…
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