Learn The Art of Photography by Nick Noa
Author:Nick, Noa [Nick, Noa]
Language: eng
Format: epub, azw3
Publisher: UNKNOWN
Published: 2019-11-17T16:00:00+00:00
Now we are going to look back at wildlife photography. Usually use 300 - 600+mm range lenses. Tele converters double the focal length, and it is not too expensive. When a full frame lens is used with a cropped sensor, magnification is applied. Try to use noise, motion, and laser triggers. Even if you couldn’t hit the button fast enough the trigger will take the photo of the animal you are trying to capture. They are also reasonably priced. Mono Pods are designed for fast movement. Be prepared for weather, and tracking the target. Don’t move around too much, stay at one spot and revisit the spot. The animals will get used to you. Be patient, like fishing. Research what animals are doing. This will help you anticipate the happenings. You can also use hides to disguise yourself. Ones are just for camera, yourself, tents, etc. Practice with normal pets like dogs. You can also set up bird feeders, these will attract squirrels but you can take photos of those too. Try to capture birds in flight. It is challenging, but go for it. Think about other wildlife you can photograph in your garden like hedgehogs, etc. Research what to lure them to you with. Remember to not harm the animals. Be sure that wind is blowing away from where you are going to watch your scent. See what you can do from the sea shore. Take a boat trip! Visit aquariums! Try not to use tripods or flashes.
The “blinkies” is the feature of the LCD that tells you that an image is overexposed. They are not totally accurate, so now we’ll look at histograms. You can locate it on the “Disp.” or the “Info” button. A histogram is is a graph that represents the distribution of tones from light to dark. The vertical represents the volume of tones, the horizontal tells us the distribution of tones from darkest to lightest. Remember, there is no such thing as the perfect histogram. If you look at a picture of a dark sky, you would see the histogram to the left side. Opposite with snow, and the middle is true for a concrete wall. A balanced photo is an even distribution throughout a histogram. Now we are analyzing colored photos. Colored photos are much harder, but overall are simple as well. Dark colors are on the left of the histogram, middle are hard to identify, but those are located in the middle of the graph and are the medium colors, and the bright colors are on the right. I can tell a photograph is overexposed because the histogram’s right side is stacked, which means it is off the charts. If the left side is stacked, it is underexposed. Some info being lost isn’t the end of the world. We can anticipate with what a histogram should look like. If we look a vibrant, colorful landscape, with shadows and trees, the histogram should be balanced. If we take a picture of a wedding dress, it will be a high key picture, so the right side of the graph should be higher.
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