Xray wrote:
Ok I digress back to planes, I think its obvious a wider, more elevated vantage point would have been better for the Mustangs shot, apparently people were taking what they could get. You would think they would showcase a historic static like this rather than hide it.
That was very much the idea, and EAA had the cherry picker there for the guy to get the shot Mark posted. That was the money shot. I could see that from down on the ground, even if you could raise a few feet, it wasn't going to be a very good pic. I'm not big on set-piece photos anyway, and mostly wanted to get among the aircraft and shoot details of them overlapping each other.
The planes were towed into position the prior evening and some of them had their canopy covers on. They took a few pics of volunteers lined up in front of the XP, but I could see they were aiming for a dawn shoot the next morning, so I got a few pics at sunset and made sure to hustle out there early the next morning for more. Several others had the same idea. EAA staff asked that we clear the area when they were getting their pics, which was fine. Getting out of someone's shot is airshow shutterbug common courtesy, and EAA deserved clean shots for all their efforts in setting this up. They also tried to get us not to take pics of the grouping even when they were not shooting, so that theirs would be exclusive. This was not so fine and most of us ignored it. EAA had an exclusive on the best angle, we figured that was enough.
They left the planes in position until 8:00 or 9:00 before dispersing them back around the warbird zone, so there was a brief chance for members to get a look at the grouping in not such good lighting. I couldn't blame them for keeping the shoot a secret, I'm sure it made crowd control a lot easier and resulted in a much cleaner pic. Overall, except for their attempt to get us regular members not to shoot anything, it was well handled and resulted in a cool moment.
August