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06:26 March 26th, 2008

How Did He Shoot That?

Posted by: Wolfgang Rattay
Tags: Reuters Photographers, , , ,

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Alain Bernard of France is seen from underwater as he enters the water to set a new world record of 47.60 seconds during the 100m freestyle in the men’s semi-finals at the European Swimming Championships in Eindhoven March 21, 2008 (Photograph by: Wolfgang Rattay).

It is of course not possible for a photographer to be in the pool during a swimming competition, but that doesn’t stop a determined photographer getting the picture!

I have worked on this problem over a number of years, and got it down to a fine art. It is necessary to pre-position an underwater housing containing a regular Canon EOS 1D Mark 2N with (usually) a 15mm fish-eye lens. When the swimmers hit the water or swim over my camera, I release the shutter via a waterproof cable. The data is transferred from the camera to another housing containing a Canon transmitter that transfers the images from the camera to my laptop.

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Above: Setting up my equipment at Eindhoven

Within seconds of the end of the race I am in a position to transmit the photographs to our desk operation in Singapore. The desk then immediately moves them globally.

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Above: Setting up my equipment at Eindhoven

The underwater pictures of Alain Bernard were out on the wire four minutes after the Frenchman set a new world record over the 100m freestyle. In my mind this is a world record too, because I appear to be the only photographer - using a remote controlled underwater camera like this - who has worked out how to achieve consistent results with this notoriously unreliable set-up. Therefore I don’t need to wait for a couple of hours for the competition to end before jumping into the pool to retrieve my CF card, as do the other photographers

In the competitive world of sport photography, just like the swimming competition, seconds count. An hour is a life-time.

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Above: At the end of the day, washing off the chlorine in my bathtub.

51 comments so far

The technique is not new. I had a housing for my f4s way back in the day when it was the top end of action photography. Remote and motion sensor photography also isn’t new. The only new thing about this is how quickly he can not put this out to his editors. Ten years ago the best we could hope for was an hour to develop the film, a couple of minutes to scan the negative, a few more to photoshop it, then a few more to email it where it needed to go.

The speed is great, and so is the shot, but there is very little new in the way of technique.

- Posted by Brad

[...] EM i svømning fra undersiden Der blev sat ny verdens rekord i 100m fri til EM i svømning i Eindhoven den 21. marts, og som gammel svømmer er det interessant. Tiden var 47.60s, men det var ikke det eneste interessante… Hele heatet blev fotograferet nede fra OG lagt på nettet 4 minutter senere… Der blev brugt et Canon Eos 1D Mark 2N med en 15mm fisheye… Læs fotografen fra Reuters, Wolfgang Rattay, beskrivelse HER… [...]

- Posted by EM i svømning fra undersiden « Elgaard’s vinkel

Wow, pretty amazing! I wish I could shoot a photo like that someday… That would be awesome. I’m into diving photos, underwater photography, but never had so much style in any of my photos!

- Posted by Nurkowanie

As you can see on the picture, there’s a really long cable connected to it

- Posted by DLuckyE

Awesome picture!

- Posted by Digital Revolutions

[...] It is of course not possible for a photographer to be in the pool during a swimming competition, but that doesn’t stop a determined photographer getting the picture!I have worked on this problem over a number of years, and got it down to a fine art.http://blogs.reuters.com/photo/2008/ 03/26/how-did-he-shoot-that/ [...]

- Posted by FuzzLinks.com » How Did He Shoot That?

Brilliant work around.

- Posted by Boutique Topaz (Katrineholm, Sweden)

[...] read more | digg story [...]

- Posted by How Did He Shoot That? | sanver.info

That is some amazing use of technology. That’s definitely taking a plunge of the deep end to get the right shot.

- Posted by Video Gamer

What’s in the other housing? The Canon transmitter? Does WiFi transmit through water?

- Posted by underwater

[...] Story is here  [...]

- Posted by Awesome tutorial on the lenghts photograher’s go to get the shot

Great picture… now that I know what went into it, I like it even more.

- Posted by Emily Church

Amazing! Shows that Reuters photographers are always the best at what they do.

- Posted by Five Times

How Did He Shoot That? [Pics] | Deliggit.com…

\r\nIt is of course not possible for a photographer to be in the pool during a swim…

- Posted by Deliggit.com | The social sites' most interesting urls

That’s pretty neat. Underwater. 4 minutes from shooting to publication? He’s got it all worked out..

- Posted by Workpost

Great job Wolfgang. I’ve always wondered how that was accomplished without distracting the divers.

- Posted by Dennis Zaki

i’ll stick to photography as a hobby …
but the picture looks good …

- Posted by subcorpus

Just wanted to say that this is very cool.

- Posted by C4

So the lesson here, I suppose, is that investing in an underwater housing is a pretty good idea if you’re covering swimming.

Cheers to Mr. Rattay!

- Posted by Skyler Reid

[...] How Did He Shoot That?The Road West from KangdingWhen I Wake UpF8 and Be ThereRenaissance…The missing link - Found!This one is worth a thousand wordsRain manNamdaemun burns…Watching paint dry - thrills and spills on the Berlaymont beat [...]

- Posted by fotowarung.bazuki.com » Blog Archive » How Did He Shoot That?

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