/r/disneyphotography
A community that focuses on photos taken in any of the Disney theme parks around the world.
Rules incoming...
/r/disneyphotography
Hi all, Im wondering if it is worthy carrying an 70-300 mm lens in wdw parks? Any suggestions on that?
I always end up taking this same picture every visit to WDW. Late at night, after the fireworks and the walkway around the river is so quiet and serene. I will miss it.
Specs: Sony A7cII w Tamron 17-28 f2.8. Edited in Lightroom mobile Insta: ryan_3.0
I shot this with my Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra and edited in Adobe Lightroom Mobile. I shot it from the public balcony on the 4th floor at the Contemporary.
I’ve seen some great photos here, but no one says if they shot it with an iPhone, a Sony, or even an old digital camera. Think it may be helpful for others trying to learn about different cameras, techniques, or shot settings.
Quick question for those who are familiar with Insta.
I have an X3 and a Go3, obviously the invisible selfie stick for both as well as an Insta360 Flow which can extend into an invisible selfie stick but I mostly use it in tripod mode or handheld.
Anyways, to my question- I’m very aware of the Selfie Stick policy so I wasn’t planning on using them extended, or on a ride/show at all, but just realized Security likely won’t be familiar and may turn me away at the checkpoint with them in my bag. I can absolutely make other plans but I’m super curious if anyone has used either inside the US parks.
Google Pixel 5a
Disneyland Dec 22, 2023
iPhone 15 Pro Max | 48MP RAW | 24mm | f1.78 | ISO 800 | 1/30s Exposure
iPhone 15 Pro Max | 12MP | 24mm | f1.78 | ISO 3200 | 0.5s exposure
It’s a photo of Herbie being strung up by wires somewhere I don’t know if it’s Disney or something else?
Absolutely love Animal Kingdom and could ride EE over and over