You should probably leave your 600mm and extenders at home then ... :sanj said:I just realized that my daughter is avoiding me coming to her graduation day after. She was telling her mother "He will bring his big camera and everyone will look at me." Ouch.
and that 200-400 too. ;DEldar said:You should probably leave your 600mm and extenders at home then ... :sanj said:I just realized that my daughter is avoiding me coming to her graduation day after. She was telling her mother "He will bring his big camera and everyone will look at me." Ouch.![]()
That was my thought from a similar post (http://www.canonrumors.com/forum/index.php?topic=25854.msg509613#msg509613). Let the pro get the official shot, and bring a smaller set up for casual and group photos after the ceremony and at the party. You can grab some portraits of her before you leave the house as well.AcutancePhotography said:Won't there be a professional photographer there to take her "official" picture?
You should attend for your daughter, not your photography.
sanj said:I was planning on just the 150-600 sigma and 5d3. Do not know how far she will be from the parents seating area.. She has bought a dress worth a small lens for the event and I better capture it. lol.
sanj said:I just realized that my daughter is avoiding me coming to her graduation day after. She was telling her mother "He will bring his big camera and everyone will look at me." Ouch.
distant.star said:.
Sorry to seem contrarian, but you've got high-end photo equipment for good reasons. This is as good a reason as any.
And your daughter is quite wrong -- they will not be looking at her. They will be looking at YOU!! Make it entertaining for them!
Eldar said:You should probably leave your 600mm and extenders at home then ... :sanj said:I just realized that my daughter is avoiding me coming to her graduation day after. She was telling her mother "He will bring his big camera and everyone will look at me." Ouch.![]()
CanonFanBoy said:At nearly every event my daughter had at school where there was a big crowd I used to stand up, wave with both arms and yell, "Hi Jennifer!!!! We're over here! We love you!" Her and her friends would just laugh. She'd say, "That's my dad." When she was cross country mountain bike and downhill racing we were always loudest with the cowbells and cheering. She'd just smile real big as she passed. We did the same for all her friends.
Most of her friend's parents were divorced and many parents never attended events no matter how important. My daughter remembers that. She brags to her friends about us (she's 30 now) and they cannot believe we are only 20 years older than her.