Wednesday, March 04, 2015

Hanvedens IP

Artificial turf
This is Hanvedens IP. Home of the football club VIF, Västerhaninge IF. The artificial turf is new. The old football field with natural grass is just to the left of the photo. The ice-hockey team Haninge Anchors uses the indoor arena, which is also used by ice skaters and it is open to the public during the Winter. Before all the sports activity this was known as Tectors grustag, an old gravel pit. My friend Sune, the historian has a few snaps from that era. I shot this with the new silent zoom lens. This is 19 photos stitched together.

6 comments:

Lasse Jansson said...

Det andas verkligen "gammalt grustag" om miljön. Och det är väl bra att anlägga en idrottsplats där, förutsatt att inte allt regnvatten samlas nere på planerna för att de ligger längst ner i en gryta.

Västerhaninge tycks ha en bra standard på sin idrott. Roligast av allt är att Haninge Anchors toppar sin hemsida med dam-hockey. Tummen upp för det!

Vad är det för objektiv du köpt? Jag tror jag missat den informationen även om jag häromdagen såg att du skrev om det "tysta zoom-objektivet".

William Kendall said...

I can see hints here of the old gravel pit. A good new use for it.

Stefan Jansson said...

Jag letade runt lite bland alla zomobjektiv och läste några tester. Sen tyckte jag att EF-S 55-250mm f/4-5.6 IS STM lät intressant efter att ha sett en youtubevideo.

VP said...

It looks brand new!

PerthDailyPhoto said...

19 shots stitched together.. why Steffe? Oh ok, is that when the camera takes a series of shots and then stitches them together to make the best shot? Seriously I don't know what I'm talking about :)

Stefan Jansson said...

From where I was standing I had to shoot this scene as a panorama to get it all in one photo Grace. Shot at 55mm I aimed the camera on a part of the football field and took a test photo, I then turned off auto focus and started shooting from right to left five photos. I they lowered the camera a bit and took another five snaps from left to right and so on until I had covered what I wanted with 19 photos. Another option would have been to use a wide angle lens. The stitching process was fully automatic in PS.