During the Tour (if there's enough riders left to compete), you might want to keep up with what the Navigators team is doing:
| 07/05/06 | 07/17/06 | National Road Festival - Silver Springs, PA | USA | NRC | 1.2 |
| 07/12/06 | 07/16/06 | Cascade Classic Bend, OR | USA | NRC | 2.3 |
| 07/15/06 | 07/23/06 | Tour of Qinghai Lake | CHN | UCI | 2.HC |
| 07/15/06 | 07/17/06 | Tour de White Rock BC Superweek | CAN | NRC |
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| 07/19/06 | 07/19/06 | Gastown Criterium BC Superweek | CAN | NRC |
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| 07/21/06 | 07/23/06 | Tour de Delta BC Superweek | CAN | NRC |
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| 07/22/06 | 07/23/06 | Owasco Stage Race - Owasco, NY | USA | NRC |
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| 07/22/06 | 07/22/06 | Mt Holly - Smithville Invitational GP, NJ | USA | NRC |
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| 07/23/06 | 07/23/06 | Freedom Tour of Long Hill - Stirling, NJ | USA | NRC |
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| 07/24/06 | 07/30/06 | The International Tour de ‘Toona - Altoona, PA | USA | NRC | 2.2 |
Back to some photography tidbits:
My gear for this Tour de Georgia ITT shot was a Canon Rebel XT; Sigma 70-200 f/2.8 lens; and a Canon 420EX flash. This is an example of what I've show before - get low and get the face in the shot. Not really a tough shot to grab with the right gear if you're also in the right spot.
Did a little post-processing too. Usually, I just make some minor adjustments in Adobe
Lightroom Beta 3 and export the file as a JPEG, which I upload to Smugmug for hosting. Smugmug is the best photo hosting solution I've found. Check out their
unlimited photo storage and sharing - FREE Trial of SmugMug.
I did Lightroom thing here too, but I also decided to toy with it in Photoshop too. I learned a new technique for sharpening the other day.
New Sharpening Technique: In Photoshop CS2, Dulicate the Background image from the layer menu; Select the new duplicate layer; Select Filters-->Other-->High Pass; Set radius to 10 - click OK; Select soft light and presto, you've got yourself a sharpened photo without the "funny edges" that you often see with the Unsharp Mask technique!
Not sure what I'm talking about? Want to understand post-processing with Photoshop a little better? Consider a good book by
Scott Kelby - the best Photoshop teacher I've read. My personal favorite is
The Photoshop CS2 Book for Digital Photographers.
I'm open to comments on how the sharpening looks - also boosted the saturation in the blues for a little more punch off the background.
G'nite, the Prologue starts in a little over 8 hours!