Well where to begin, when I decided to show some of the photographs I have taken of animals (or more my pets), I didn't even think about the text to put with it. For weeks now i have been meaning to do this next post, but I must say finding a text to go with the Photographs is a lot harder then you may think. So here I go just writing what I am thinking, so lets see how this goes.
The first photograph of my cat, "The Watching Eyes" I believe to be my best Photograph of an animal I have taken working on Manual.
The Wondering Eyes Date : 12 May 2013 Time : 09h51 Location : Natasha's (my) home Camera Model : Nikon D3200 f-stop :f/5.6 Shutter Speed : 1/60 sec IOS : 100 Focal length : 55mm Metering Mode :Pattern No Flash |
Another reason why I find animal photography hard is you have to work with the light, and work with the way the animal is placed, finding the perfect image before the light (which is often natural, therefore the sun) changes, or the animals decides to pull a ugly face or look away from this perfect image you have just placed. As I am sure everyone has learnt (even those that take images off their phones) is that you can't take a photograph of an animal with a flash, their eyes just light up and go red. This could only work if you have a diffuser to place over the flash just to soften it, what I mean is if you want the photograph you need to take it, not fiddle trying to get this cover over the flash, and then come back up to take the photograph and the animal has moved or vanished (seems to be the one thing all animals are brilliant at).
Although in this post I have only seemed to point out the difficulties in capturing a animal, DO NOT take it in a negative way. It is an amazing learning experience in Photography and all that goes with it. It must be absolutely awesome to be able to take such exciting, story telling photographs of wildlife, wild animals in their natural environment. Amazing. My family and I just recently went to Mozambique (next blog post) and our next door neighbor was Roger Horrocks (http://www.rogerhorrocks.com/ , http://za.linkedin.com/in/rogerhorrocks), an underwater cameraman, he was kind enough to show us some of his underwater footage for a documentary on dolphins which he is doing for the BBC, it was absolutely beautiful, one of the most beautiful thing I have yet watched. This opened my eyes to wildlife photography a lot more, which I will definitely be trying more of.
The Admiring Eyes Date :12 May 2013 Time :12h06 Location : Natasha (my) home Camera Model : Nikon D3200 f-stop : f/10 Shutter Speed : 1/60 sec ISO :100 Focal Length : 55mm Metering Mode : Pattern No flash |