Photography is the art and practice of creating durable photo by recording.
Photography has many uses for business, science, manufacturing , art, and recreational purposes.
How to Better Photograph Baby Animals
recently got to photograph a baby raccoon with my wife, Denise. The picture-taking was so much fun! When looking over the resulting pictures, however, I also saw many photos that were not great. Then it occurred to me that looking at both the keepers and the losers might help you learn how to take better pictures. So I selected 10 pairs of pictures that show what works and what doesn't work. Note that, in many cases, both of these before and after photos are fine. Sometimes one is not necessarily better than the other. They often just have different effects on the people who look at your photos. So let's begin by taking a look at a pair of two good photos.
Rocky the Raccoon From Below © Denise H. Miotke All Rights Reserved |
Meet Rocky the Raccoon - From Both High and Low Points of View
Rocky the Raccoon From Above © Jim Miotke All Rights Reserved |
Denise's version makes Rocky look more impressive, energetic, and delightful.
While both are good, I like Denise's version best out of these two.
Close and Also Good © Jim Miotke All Rights Reserved |
Get Closer to Your Photographic Subject
Baby Raccoon - Far but Good © Denise H. Miotke All Rights Reserved |
My version shows off Rocky without telling as much about his log home.
They both succeed... one just has a different subject than the other.
Nice and Sharp © Denise H. Miotke All Rights Reserved |
Sharp Focus is Very Important
Raccoon with Dandelion - Way Too Blurry © Jim Miotke All Rights Reserved |
As obvious as this sounds, it is important to point out because sharpness is really hard to acheive when photographing fast moving subjects as in this baby raccoon.
Make sure you hold the camera very steady and, if your camera allows you to change shutter speed, make sure this speed is very high. Denise and I found that we needed shutter speeds of 1/125 or faster to capture Rocky without blur.
Picture of Raccoon on the Rule of Thirds © Denise H. Miotke All Rights Reserved |
Rule of Thirds
Baby Raccoon in Hole - Centered © Denise H. Miotke All Rights Reserved |
Looking Right at the Camera- Much Better! © Jim Miotke All Rights Reserved |
Last Important Point: Looking at the Camera
Baby Raccoon Looking Away © Jim Miotke All Rights Reserved |
I hope these five points help. Denise and I certainly learned a lot by this experience and we hope you, too, can learn from our experiences.
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