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Photographing the Hot Air Balloon Festival

August 8, 2019 Neil vN 2 Comments

Photographing the Hot Air Balloon Festival

It is an adventure to be experienced – going up in a hot-air balloon. The most recent time was at the NJ Festival of Ballooning this year, as part of a photo group, arranged by Unique Photo here in NJ. If you haven’t been, check Unique Photo’s schedule for the next one (next year), as well as all the other photo activities and outings they arrange.

The first time I went for a hot-air balloon ride, was as a surprise arranged by my friends when I visited South Africa in 2014. For that trip, I only brought along a Fuji X100s (affiliate), because I wanted to travel light. I was quite happy with how those photos came out, but I also knew that I would have wanted wider shots to show more of the expansive scenery.

I was therefore ready this time, and decided on my Sony A7 iii camera (affiliate) with the Sony 16-35mm f/2.8 GM (affiliate) for this trip. Also important, was the B+W circular polarizer filter 82mm  (B&H / Amazon).

Polarizers clean up glare to give more saturated and vibrant colors. Polarizer filters also reduce the distant haze in landscapes like these. Foliage and skies specifically are affected, but I also knew that the hot air balloons would look more colorful and saturated with a polarizer.

To be able to rotate the polarizer filter during the ride, I took the lens hood off, and promptly lost it somewhere while still on the ground. That was an expensive $60 lesson to be more careful. I have no idea why Sony / Nikon / Canon plastic is so expensive, except for the reason that they can charge that.

Anyway, the camera settings:  I ranged the ISO settings between 400 – 800 ISO to keep the shutter speed around 1/500 with an aperture of f/5.6

Even thought the hot air balloon ride is a gentle glide, and the camera is stabilized (and I am using an ultra-wide lens),  I still wanted a shutter speed to ensure the photos would be sharp.

If anyone is considering a hot air balloon ride, but is anxious about that idea – it isn’t scary experience in the least. It really is a gentle glide. Doesn’t feel shaky or rickety at all, and is surprisingly peaceful (when the burner isn’t firing.) It is highly recommended as a peaceful adventure!

 

 

Photo gear used for these images

  • Sony A7 iii camera  (B&H / Amazon)
  • Sony 16-35mm f/2.8 GM  (B&H / Amazon)
  • B+W circular polarizer filter 82mm  (B&H / Amazon)

 

Related links

  • Hot-air balloon ride (2014)
  • NJ Hot Air Balloon Festival  (my Instagram)

 

Filed Under: journeys, personal work, photo shoot, photography tips Tagged With: hot air balloons


 

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I also offer photography workshops and tutoring sessions, whether in person, or via online video tutoring sessions.

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Thank you,

Neil vN

Books by Neil van Niekerk


 




2 Comments, Add Your Own

  1. 1Valent Lau says

    August 26, 2019 at 4:04 am

    I’ve only been on a tethered balloon ride. I’m not scared about going up. I’m scared about coming down!

    Is everything taken wide? I would have thought you’d need a tele given the distances and space.

    Reply
    • 1.1Neil vN says

      August 26, 2019 at 9:04 am

      I took a Sony A9 with a 24-105mm f/4 along just in case I needed longer, but ended up not using it at all — just the 16-35mm, as I had anticipated.

      The scenery was New Jersey countryside, so not all that majestic — I might have used the longer lens if the scenery had warranted that.

      Reply

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