Photographing Zoos : Page 3

5 Top Tips Successful zoo portraits
1 TELEPHOTO LENS
You’ll need a lens of a least 200mm to be able to fill the frame with your subject and exclude distracting background details. Take a monopod for support.
2 CHOOSE YOUR VIEWPOINT
Look for a viewpoint that will provide the most natural setting. In particular, avoid getting walls and man-made landscaping features in shot.
3 BE PATIENT
If, having chosen a good viewpoint your subject is facing the wrong direction, be patient. Either wait for it to move or continue on to another part of the zoo and return later.
4 lose the background
Use a wide aperture to throw everything behind your subject out of focus. On the computer, darken down any remaining background detail using the burn tool.
5 OR, ALTERNATIVELY...
Instead of trying to hide the fact your subject is in a zoo, try including the environment in the shots and going for a documentary approach.
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- 1. Photographing Zoos
- 2. Photographing Zoos : Page 2
- 3. Photographing Zoos : Page 3





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Latest comments
January 15 20:03
Dan
Considering that zoos attain a good part of their income from visitors wishing to make photographs, it puzzles me that few of them pay attention to backgrounds. Surely it would take neither great effort or expenditure to create enclaves that the animals find attractive and provide photogenic backgrounds.