Pretend you are going to shoot a car zooming past you. You need a slightly longer shutter speed on this.
Start by turning your back to the car approaching you, and plant your feet. Now, twist your torso back toward the car.
Look at the car through your camera and, as it approaches, press the button and follow the car's movement with your entire body.
The effect is that you'll briefly be moving your camera WITH the car, so the car becomes a still object (relative to the camera) while the background is the thing that is moving. The car will be more in focus, while the background will blue behind it.
In reality, you won't want to have your back to the approaching car; it should be more of an oblique angle. That was just to illustrate the technique.
no subject
Pretend you are going to shoot a car zooming past you. You need a slightly longer shutter speed on this.
Start by turning your back to the car approaching you, and plant your feet. Now, twist your torso back toward the car.
Look at the car through your camera and, as it approaches, press the button and follow the car's movement with your entire body.
The effect is that you'll briefly be moving your camera WITH the car, so the car becomes a still object (relative to the camera) while the background is the thing that is moving. The car will be more in focus, while the background will blue behind it.
In reality, you won't want to have your back to the approaching car; it should be more of an oblique angle. That was just to illustrate the technique.
Panning takes a lot of practice.