jim kirk jr.
Member
...for photography...
For myself,it can't really be too cold-so long as the lens dosn't fog,the batteries don't die and my fingers don't fall off I'm good to go.Anything over say 85 F and I'm pretty much not shooting that day-not into sweating all over my equipment or constantly having to wipe my brow.Granted that means that during the hot,hot days of summer my time out is limited;day off needs to coincide with a nice day that's not super humid.Of course if I were living in an area that was pretty warm all year long I would have adapted long before now.I'd imagine though that someone doing portraits outside or street photography wouldn't want excessive amounts of heat and humidity either.Or maybe it's just me....
For myself,it can't really be too cold-so long as the lens dosn't fog,the batteries don't die and my fingers don't fall off I'm good to go.Anything over say 85 F and I'm pretty much not shooting that day-not into sweating all over my equipment or constantly having to wipe my brow.Granted that means that during the hot,hot days of summer my time out is limited;day off needs to coincide with a nice day that's not super humid.Of course if I were living in an area that was pretty warm all year long I would have adapted long before now.I'd imagine though that someone doing portraits outside or street photography wouldn't want excessive amounts of heat and humidity either.Or maybe it's just me....