Thursday, December 30, 2021

# Times, World, Photo

14 Tips to Improve Your Forest Photography


Capturing pictures of forests with a camera is a unique challenge.

I live in the core of the Boreal Forest in the interior of Alaska. These woods offer a landscape of spindly spruce trees, quaking aspens, and birches. Endless opportunities for forest photography.

I spend a great deal of time wandering the woods, camera in hand, searching for the composition that captures the quiet beauty of the place. A moody picture of forest covered in mist

 

Whether it’s your local woods or the rainforest of the Amazon, the standard rules of landscape photography are difficult to apply. Finding images within the environment of the woods requires a new mindset for the landscape photographer.

For those aiming to improve their forest photography, here are a few tips to keep in mind. 

14. Take Low-Angle Shots Looking up at the Treetops

When you take a shot of the trees from a low angle, it places the viewer into the forest. They will feel like they are looking up at the immense trees.

It emphasizes the enormity of these mighty plants, making the viewer feel humbled and small against their size.

Low angle photography of trees

13. Use Aerial Photography to Capture the Vastness of the Forest

With modern advances, you can now take impressive aerial photography with a drone. This technique is amazing for photographing forests. From above, the trees seem even vaster and never-ending.

It is best to take aerial photography on a clear day, to get a full view of the tree-tops. In misty weather, you can also create some great moody shots.

An aerial photography view of a dense forest

12. Use the Moonlight for Unique Forest Photography

Forests are dark places, especially at night and during the blue hour. At those times, pale starlight and the dim glow of the sky struggle to reach the ground.

In an open woodland, there is more potential. Moonlit forest photography is a chance to make unique images. The moon, when full, casts a surprising amount of light onto the landscape. It also provides a potential subject in itself.

Shooting dark woods is much like other night photography. The foregrounds of trees require extra attention. Consider how the limbs and trunks fall across the sky. Compose so that they complement, rather than obstruct the background.

Forest photography of snow-covered trees during twilight with stars above

11. Capture the Stars and Night Sky Through the Trees

If you look upwards, the trees frame the night sky. You can take beautiful shots of the night sky surrounded by nature.

Where I live in Alaska, I often have the chance to photograph the northern lights through the trees.  This can be a major challenge. As the lights move across the sky, I’m constantly shifting position to assure that they are visible through the trees.

Forest photography of the Aurora Borealis seen from the ground during winter

10. Capture the Silhouette of the Forest for Striking Images

The dim light before dawn or after dusk is a very hard time to shoot in the woods. Trees, already dark, become black silhouettes. Within the forest things are even dimmer, rendering even basic image-making difficult.

The only hope for a successful shot during these hours is to find a tree silhouette against a backdrop of sky.

Forest photography of the silhouettes of a tree with full moon in background

9. Use the Best Gear and Settings for Night Forest Photography

What Camera Gear to Use

A tripod-mounted camera is an absolute must for shooting in the woods in low light. The long exposure times make hand holding an impossibility. A fast wide lens, like an f/2.8 or faster, will also be useful in the dark conditions.

What Camera Settings to Use

Embrace long exposures and higher ISOs for night forest pictures. When the moon is not your subject and the night is dark, consider something like f/2.8, for 3 or 4 seconds at ISO 1600 as a starting point. From there, adjust your shutter speed or ISO up and down (but leave your aperture wide open) until you find the exposure you want.

8. Make the Most of Golden Hour

The low-angle light of the golden hour is often muted on the forest floor. The trees block most of the incoming sunlight, leaving behind beams to track across the ground, and through the branches.

That warm light will create a juxtaposition of the cool, shaded tones, and the yellow sunlight. This can be a beautiful time of day. If you are fortunate to find a bit of fog rolling through the trees, these hours are matchless.

Forest photography with golden hour sunlight

What Camera Settings

The right camera settings vary a lot during the warm light of the golden hour.

I tend to constantly shift my shutter speed and aperture depending on the final product I want to create. Since I often work handheld in the woods, I try to keep my shutter speed up around 1/60th second or faster, particularly when using a telephoto lens.

An aperture of around f/8 will usually yield sharp images while maintaining a pleasing depth of field. But again, there is no ‘correct’ setting.

7. Shoot at Midday for Contrasting Lights

At Midday, any sun reaching through the trees will result in a blasting contrast of hot sunlight and cool shade.

A forest scene shot midday, with strong light and nice shadows

6. Embrace Overcast Weather for Forest Photography

Clouds are like a studio softbox for the sun. They soften the harsh light, mute shadows, and provide illumination. This is a perfect formula for photographing forests.

The harsh contrast caused by sunlight disappears. The complex patterns of undergrowth, tree trunks, branches, and leaves emerge. While far from perfect for the grand landscapes, cloud cover is perfect for the woods. On those grey days, I head for the forest with my camera.

a person walking in a light filled forest

5. Capture the Forest Details

The easiest way to create successful forest photography is to remove all the clutter of the woods. Look past the chaotic branches, the crowds of tree trunks, the mess of leaves on the forests floor. Focus on one specific part.

With the dappled light of morning, this can be done to great effect. Sections of the forest are illuminated. Look where the light is falling, or where it will soon arrive, and compose an image on those locations. A detail of the forest floor, a flower, a single backlit leaf.

closeup of a fly-agaric in a forest

4. Use the Woodland to Tell a Story

Look for small parts of forests that tell a bigger story about the place. What is the season? Can you tell that with a single detailed image? An autumn leaf or a spring bud may be good choices to share a bigger story.

For this kind of image, a short telephoto lens or even a macro lens is a great choice. Images with a shallow depth of field that turns the background into a pleasing blur will be more effective.  A deep depth of field can have a tangled background, which distracts from the scene you want to highlight.

closeup of a browsing, with spiderweb

3. Create Interesting Compositions with Different Elements of the Forest

Stepping back from the details to large sections of forests can be much more difficult photographically. The woods are full of chaos. There is often too much happening to effectively isolate a clean and interesting composition.

This is where perspective matters. In the previous section about details, I suggested looking for the single element that will tell the viewer a bit about the place. Here, when trying to go a bit bigger, to show more of the forest landscape, you’ll want to keep those details in mind.

In the woods, find a detail, a branch, flower, or leaf that you find compelling. Then, using a wide-angle lens, allow your focus to fall on your detail, while also showing the surroundings.

This is standard practice in many types of landscape photography. In the woods the method is more complicated. You have to find the right combination of detail and background that provides a wider perspective on the forest.

Forest photography close up of tundra flowers

This is tricky stuff but can be an enjoyable challenge in composition. Images that show off the forest in all its glory, while retaining the fine details of the place are some of my favourite woodland images.

2. Experiment with Focal Lengths to Capture the View

When the forest opens up, we are offered a rare chance to see a broad landscape of trees. These images blur the line between open landscape and forest landscape. But the composition holds some challenges not usually encountered in open country.
Forest photography of broad landscape view of tree-covered hillsideTight and wide-angle compositions are both options in these scenarios. A wide scene might provide a sense of scale, the drama of a seemingly endless patch of forest.

The composition can become challenging. It is easy to end up showing too much of the nearby surroundings, reducing the impact of the scale.

A telephoto image, on the other hand, has the advantage of isolating the scene from the surrounding chaos and allowing a clean composition.
Forest photography featuring a broad landscape view of tree with mountain in backgroundThere isn’t a right or wrong way to make these forest images. What will work and what won’t depends entirely on the scene at hand.

Experiment with multiple focal lengths and see what works, but keep in mind the story of the forest, and where you are. Make an effort to tell that story by providing context in your images.

1. Try Black and White Forest Photography

Look up the classic images of the Redwoods in black and white by Ansel Adams. You’ll understand that forests translate beautifully into black and white. The stark tree trunks against shaded, dark backgrounds result in compelling compositions.

Forest photography of snow covered trees in black and whiteBut black & white photography is tough. In the woods, it takes time to learn to “see” in B&W. We view the world in colour, and determining how a colour scene will appear in black & white is challenging and requires practice. Here are a few guidelines:

Look for contrast. Scenes with a mosaic of brights and darks tend to translate well into black and white.

Take advantage of backlight. Light coming from behind your subject can be difficult to use in colour photography. It is very effective in the contrast world of black and white.

Embrace the shadows. Exposing for the bright parts of your frame will often turn the dark shadows to near black. This can help you eliminate distracting elements in your frame.

There are few natural environments where leaving the colour behind can be as effective as in the forest, so give it a shot.

Monotone Forest photography in shallow focus

Deep in the woods, the sounds of the outside world are hidden behind layers of trees, branches and leaves.

Even in small patches of woodlands, you can find isolation. Forests are a place to turn off the daily grind and find yourself in the quiet with a camera. This is a big part of why I enjoy forest photography so much. Even a short walk from my backyard, I can feel as though I’m in the wild.

Many of us live within a short distance of a patch of woods. Find yours, explore it. Take the time to find those photographic compositions and then share what you make. I look forward to seeing your forest images!

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Six Tips for Getting the Camera Focus in the Right Place at the Right Time – Free Quick Guide


There are numerous articles on the topic of producing sharp pictures.

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The autofocus systems on your camera are highly technical. If you don’t tell your camera how and where to focus, and at what point in time that the camera focus should be achieved… well, then your camera will decide for you.

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“Auto focus is amazing on today’s cameras. Point your camera in a general direction, press the shutter halfway down, and the camera does all the work. But the camera does not always know what you want in focus. You may be looking at a flower in the foreground, but your camera focuses on a tree further away. When you use the autofocus mode, your camera is guessing at what you want in focus. It might be a good guess most of the time, but it is still a guess. Your camera does not know what you are looking at and what you want to be sharp.” – Jenn Mishra.

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