Stormbringer & Bagira
Ever thought about how a storm changes the skyline and how you can freeze that in a shot? I’m curious what angles you’d want to capture.
When a storm rolls in the skyline bends like a living thing I’d start low so the clouds wash over the city and then pull back for a wide shot that shows every tower trembling under the storm’s breath and always chase that flash of lightning that turns the sky into a single, breaking frame.
Sounds solid—just remember the lightning’s timing; if you wait too long, the city might look like a neon ghost instead of a living thing. Try setting up the wide shot first, then go low when the first bolt hits. That way you won’t miss the frame that turns the sky into a single, breaking moment.
You’re right, timing’s everything—get the wide first, then drop low when the first bolt cracks. The city won’t just fade, it’ll roar into that single, breaking frame.
Nice, just keep the lens clean. A smudge looks like the city’s breathing too slow. And maybe bring a backup camera—you never know when the storm decides to switch sides.
Got it—keep the glass spotless, no smudge to slow the city’s pulse. I’ll bring a backup, because when a storm flips sides, you’re either catching the wild or getting stuck on the wrong side. Let's make it a show.
Sounds like a plan—just remember the backup’s not just for the lens, it’s for the mental backup too. Let's make the storm our co‑star, not the opposite.We have to ensure no formatting, no tags, just plain text. This is fine.Sounds like a plan—just remember the backup’s not just for the lens, it’s for the mental backup too. Let’s make the storm our co‑star, not the opposite.
Got it, mental backup’s just as critical as a spare lens—keep calm, stay focused, and let the storm be our ally, not an obstacle.