#BehindTheShot

2026-03-07
Early morning walk at Huys ter Heide, Tilburg – The Netherlands.

Yesterday morning I set out before sunrise with a simple goal: photograph the moonset. Nature, however, had other plans.

The road I normally take into the area was closed, forcing me to take a long detour. By the time I arrived, the Moon had already slipped below the horizon. No moonset today… but perhaps something else.

Just after stepping out of the car and walking into the forest, still adjusting my gear, I suddenly came face to face with two deer. They looked straight at me. I moved slowly, hoping they would stay calm long enough for a photo. They didn’t. They leapt away, and when I checked my camera… the images were far too dark. My settings weren’t ready yet.

A little further along I reached the lakes. In the shallow water stood two Common Cranes (Grus grus) — Kraanvogels. A rare sight here. My excitement lasted only seconds before someone unknowingly walked straight onto the boardwalk and the cranes lifted off into the sky.

Frustration was definitely building.

Then, along a narrow path, three Scottish Highland cattle crossed in front of me. I waited patiently at a respectful distance. As I passed them, one slowly turned back toward me. I knelt behind a fence and finally captured a moment worth keeping.

Shot with my Canon 5D Mark IV and Sigma 100–400mm, f/6.4 – 1/500 sec – ISO 3200.

Even when luck seems absent, nature still offers something valuable: the walk itself.

#HuysTerHeide #Tilburg #DutchNature #NatureNetherlands #MorningWalk #NaturePhotography #WildlifePhotography #ScottishHighlander #HighlandCattle #UnexpectedMoments #FieldStory #BehindTheShot #OutdoorPhotography #NatureObservation #CanonPhotography #Canon5DMarkIV #Sigma100400 #TelephotoLens
#HandheldPhotography #NatureWalks #NatureExperience #LightAndLife
#NatureStories #StayCurious #ExploreNature #WildMoments
#DutchLandscape #WonderingLens #ByMaikeldeBakker #MaikeldeBakkerPhotography #PixelfedPhotography #NatureLovers
2025-12-07
Lando & Max in the Rain at Spa

Celebrating Lando Norris becoming World Champion feels like the perfect moment to share one of my favourite images from last year at Spa-Francorchamps — a day when the world was nothing but rain, engines, and raw speed.

I was standing along the straight just after the start line, where the cars rocket past with that mix of mechanical force and almost biological reflex — the kind of speed you don’t just see, but feel. It was pouring, the kind of Belgian rain that sneaks into every opening, so I was very thankful I’d invested in a proper rain cover for my gear. My setup that day was the Canon 7D Mark II paired with the Sigma 100–400mm, shooting with a slightly slower shutter speed and tracking each car to capture that sense of motion instead of freezing it lifeless. A technique that’s easy to miss… but so rewarding when it works.

The physics behind it is simple but beautiful: by allowing motion blur perpendicular to your tracking direction, the sensor records velocity itself — almost like drawing with light and momentum. And that felt fitting for Spa, a place where nature, danger, and engineering always seem to collide.

And because Max Verstappen came back with such strength in the second half of the season, I’ve added a shot of him as well — also taken in the rain. Two champions in their own way, two stories in one storm.

#Formula1 #SpaFrancorchamps #RainRacing #F1Photography #SportsPhotography #MotorsportMagic #PanningShot #Canon7DMarkII #Sigma100400 #BelgianGP #LandoNorris #WorldChampion #MaxVerstappen #SpeedAndRain #RacingInTheWet #DynamicMotion #PhotographyInTheRain #TracksideView #FastAndFluid #LightAndMomentum #ShutterSpeedPlay #StoryThroughSpeed #MechanicalBeauty #F1Fans #MotorsportArt #PhotoStorytelling #WonderingLens #ByMaikeldeBakker #NatureOfSpeed #ChasingMotion #F1Weekend #SpeedCaptured #RacingPassion #CanonPhotography #SigmaLensArt #BelgiumRain #F1Life #BehindTheShot #WildWeatherShots #TracksideMoments
2025-10-19

It costs $0.00 to support a 43 y.o. wildlife photographer from Czechia 🇨🇿 Decades of patience, silence, and love for the wild — shared through every photograph I take. 🦉📸 I capture moments from the wild, from misty mornings over Czech ponds to cliffside gannets by the sea. 🌏
#wildlifephotography #birdphotography #naturephotography #birding #wildlife #forest #photographer #birdwatching #naturelover #wildlifepassion #behindtheshot #czechwildlife #intothewild #jirisvestkaphotography #silentsunday

Young owl.
2025-06-25
Symphony of the Savanna
A rare stillness in the wild — a zebra meets my gaze as giraffes wander silently in the background, while impalas bask in the golden grass. It was as if nature orchestrated this composition herself — every element in harmony, every species at ease.

📸 Behind the scenes: This moment came together in an instant. I was tracking the giraffes when the zebra stepped into the frame. I didn’t move — just clicked. One frame. One breath.

📍 Akagera National Park, Rwanda
📷 Nikon Z6
🔭 NIKKOR Z 24-200mm @ 200mm
⚙️ 1/1000 sec, f/11, ISO 720

#AkageraNationalPark #RwandaWildlife #ZebraStare #GiraffeGrace #ImpalasOfAfrica #NikonZ6 #NikkorZ #WildlifePhotography #EastAfricaExplored #UntamedAfrica #SavannaStories #BehindTheShot #Rwanda #TravelRwanda #VisitRwanda #RwandaTourism #EastAfrica #AfricanAdventures #pixelfed #photography #PhotosOfMastodon #マスト写真部
A zebra stands in a grassy field, with giraffes visible in the background among trees and shrubs. Several small impalas are located nearby. The scene captures a vibrant wildlife setting.
Quixoticgeekquixoticgeek@v.st
2025-02-17

How did I get this shot ?

Well...

It involved an upside down tripod... A long linen skirt, and the remote function of the camera...

I couldn't get close enough with the tripod the right way up, so I inverted it & hung the camera. To get a proper background I needed to hand something dark and matte. I tried a dark grey towel at first but it's texture showed up on the image. So I switched to my long linen skirt. Draped over the irrigation hose.

And it worked!!!

#photography #BehindTheShot

A camera hanging off an inverted tripod over a large rectangular black tub with snow drops in bloom, and yellow crocuses soon to bloom. To the left a long linen skirt is draped over a hose to provide the background of the shot.
2023-02-05

I’ll be recording an upcoming episode of Behind the Shot this week with Pete Souza - yes, a bucket-list guest.

Send me your questions, and be sure to tag #BehindTheShot. I won’t be able to include them all, obviously, but I’ll try to get a few in there.

petapixel (unofficial)petapixel@ծմակուտ.հայ
2021-09-11

Photographer Behind ‘The Falling Man’ Looks Back on His 9/11 Photo

To commemorate 20 years of the tragic September 11 terrorist attacks in 2001, photojournalist Richard Drew looks back on the split-second moment in which he captured "The Falling Man," an iconic and powerful photograph that brings back the horrors of that day.

Note : The video contains graphic images that may be disturbing to some viewers.

Photography is an incredibly powerful tool that can create a lasting impact as proved by photographers who have created iconic images that have become strongly embedded in today's culture and collective memory.

One such photograph is "The Falling Man," captured by Drew, an Associated Press photojournalist of almost six decades. His conviction throughout his career is that timing is everything and if the photographer is not present, the opportunity to document important moments will be lost.

"My job is to record history": @AP photographer Richard Drew describes experience covering 9/11 on @CBSSunday. https://t.co/nYtmnL1kuJ

— AP CorpComm (@AP_CorpComm) September 7, 2021

In an interview with CBS Sunday Morning , Drew looks back on the day the deadliest terrorist attacks were committed on American soil which saw thousands of people killed, including hundreds of first responders.

On the day of the attacks, Drew was on an assignment, shooting a maternity fashion show. His office called him and told him a plane had hit the World Trade Center building, and Drew immediately headed towards the epicenter of the attacks and started photographing the moment he left the subway.

Photo by Robert on Flickr via Wikimedia Commons

As a veteran photojournalist, Drew knows what it takes to document horrific events -- he remains objective, shuts down his personal responses, and focuses on recording history.

This is the same principle he also applied to photograph the desperate people who were trapped on the upper floors of the burning World Trade Center and had made the grave decision to jump to their death to escape the fire and smoke (as well as those who were blown out by force and fell).

As one such man fell, tumbling in the sky, one of the frames in the sequence Drew captured showed the man falling headfirst, vertical to the towers. This particular frame became known as "The Falling Man," and the image was published in numerous newspapers the next day. Many readers found the photograph too shocking and disturbing to look at.

Twenty years on and this image still creates powerful emotions in the audience through its seemingly abstract portrayal of terror and pain endured that day. Drew explains this is because everyone can identify with it and feel that this person could be them.

One of the Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist's most famous images is of a figure falling from the World Trade Center's Twin Towers during the 9/11 terror attacks. He says that viewers identify with it because they think, "That could be me." https://t.co/378a1oq4BV pic.twitter.com/Z9nAuotCMF

— CBS Sunday Morning 🌞 (@CBSSunday) September 6, 2021

The pictured person has not been officially identified yet, but journalists have speculated it could have been Norberto Hernandez, a pastry chef at Windows on the World, or Jonathan Briley, a sound engineer who also worked at Windows on the World.

Drew's photographs have also helped identify an additional victim who fell -- his identity was confirmed by her fiancée who visited Drew in his office to go through the photographs, frame by frame.

More resources, support, and archives of the September 11 attacks can be found on the National September 11 Memorial & Museum website, while other powerful images from the Associated Press photojournalists have been curated by the organization in a recent blog post.

#culture #educational #911 #behindtheshot #controversial #counterterrorism #iconic #richarddrew #september11 #september11th #story #terrorism #terrorofwar #thefallingman

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