I've seen fantastic places, but no other experience has been like photographing Hawaii, a world of vibrant color, people and landscapes. The combination of tropical beauty and soaring green cliffs is astounding. And colors are everywhere, every day. It was all so inspiring that I want to share them and how I photographed them.
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Photographing Hawaii - Gear
The way I approached photographing Hawaii was to look for simple images of color that felt like Hawaii. I wanted to avoid tackling or planning too much and avoid expecting every shot to be on National Geographic. This was a family trip, not a photo shoot.
To start, I needed to travel with less but serious photo gear. I stuffed everything except my tripod into a Tenba Discovery mini pack, which stretched at the seams trying to contain my DSLR with battery grip, three lenses and a flash plus more accessories. I chose the pack so I could be more agile yet still keep my most essential gear with me. It took this experience to realize the value of an 18-200 mm lens, which I don't have but would've greatly preferred. Instead, I packed my 70-200 2.8, ultrawide 12-24 and standard 24-85. I did get great images, but I'm confident I would've gotten mostly the same images with a single 18-200 lens.
So, my first piece of advice is take one lens if possible. Don't worry about an 18-200 not being as tack sharp or as fast as a single great lens for each length. Unless National Geographic is paying you for a minor technical advantage, one lens will do you wonders. For family trips, I try to travel lighter. Since I didn't have one lens that covered every range, and I couldn't decide on just one lens, I took my favorite three. If this had been an assignment, I'd have brought even more gear.
I found myself using the polarizers frequently. For travel photography, I hate filters because they add hassle, but in a place like Hawaii, you can't leave home without it. Hawaii is about color -- deep blues and greens, lots of water, and lots of bright light everywhere. Even in overcast conditions, a CPL can save you work in post and make the difference between an OK shot and a standout. The CPL was the only filter I used. When it didn't work or wasn't necessary, I took it off and used no filters.
I took my Sekonic L-358 but used it infrequently. Often there simply wasn't time or it wasn't practical to stop and take a reading, and I'm good enough with matrix metering to get the shot. To be sure, I often bracket, and at the end of the day I delete the dark or bright images in camera to recover card space, as I don't travel with a laptop.
The ColorChecker is great for white balance when you use it, but I used it rarely just for practicality reasons. Much of the time I was shooting with the 70-200, which is too long to shoot the ColorChecker in my own hand. Sometimes I just didn't feel like having it in my pocket. Also, I wasn't on a critical shoot, and in-camera settings got me very close 100 percent of the time.
In Hawaii, simply using the daylight setting gives a pleasing look in most circumstances, and it's unlikely to be off by more than a few hundred Kelvins. In fact the only times I moved off it were to shoot in overcast conditions and when I used white balance tricks. I did use the CC for light profiles, which is essential, and occasional white balance reference in tricky conditions and when I used custom white balance and wanted a reference to fall back on in Lightroom.
I used the tripod twice: once at Haleakala for sunrise and once for a family portrait. Had I been getting paid for images, I might have set up a few more times but I wouldn't have lugged it everywhere.
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