Rule 1. Background must be a garage door, cream if possible.
Rule 2. Drive side must be facing the camera.
That's it, job done.
Bike photography
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Re: Bike photographyWhat a bunch of pomp and ceremony. There are 2 simple rules when doing bicycle cycle photo photography:
Rule 1. Background must be a garage door, cream if possible. Rule 2. Drive side must be facing the camera. That's it, job done.
Re: Bike photography
You've touched one of these? Possibly one of the rarest motorcycles ever made. I'm impressed no end.
Re: Bike photographyI was a mechanic at Action for a while then moved on to their "big project" . The racing had just finished and they were onto the model they were trying to turn into the production bike.
I got very good at stripping it down to the crank and back again. It really was an impressive motor, I rode many miles on the motor itself but not the chassis. It went through a couple of morphs into the chopper thingy. The power it put out was beautiful. But it was doomed from the start.
Re: Bike photography
Excellent advice Cray. This weekend I'll paint my garage door cream. Was sick of the blue anyway.
Re: Bike photographyWhat a stroke of luck being able to work and ride one. I saw a Hunwick Hallam at the Moto GP about five or six years ago and that's the only one I've seen in the flesh. I seem to recall that they're called something else these days. Turn it onto a cruiser........... that'll work. This is why motorcycles and motorcycling are dying a slow death.
I'm into the bevels so I love your comparison with the HW and pulling apart some Simplex gear. Bicycle technology seems to freak some out.
Re: Bike photographyYeah it was a cruiser when I finished there in 2001 ( went back to London )... I think it had totally folded up by the end of that year.
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