This
portrait was taken in front of a busy store front. Shallow depth of
field hides the uninspiring background. Settings: 50mm, 1/2000@f1.4.
ISO100. Photo by Jenn Mishra
You may want to remove all detail leaving only color or you may only want to
context. We want to know where the person is or where the action is taking
place.
But we want the context to be secondary. Blurring the environment
allows the
viewer to see the context without distracting from the main
story.
Venice as background to this gondoliere. Settings: 240mm, 1/500@f8.0. ISO640. Photo by Jenn Mishra
Different apertures will produce more or less blur. Generally,
shooting wide open at f2.8
or f1.4 will create the most blur. If there
is too much blur or you want a bit more detail,
select a small aperture
like f5.6 or f8.0.
A shallow depth of field creates separation and allows your subject to pop off the
background.
To Guide the Eye
A viewer will naturally look at the most in-focus part of your image
first. Knowing
this, you can guide your viewer’s eye exactly where you
want.
In a busy scene, you can select one focus point. One person or object becomes
the subject.
Selective focus is important when you have many points of interest.
Also, you can emphasize part of a scene or a feature. For instance,
the eyes are
the most important part of a portrait. Making the eyes the
focal point and letting
the image blur ensures the eyes will be the
focus.
Shallow
depth of field ensures you’ll look at this Indian man’s face first. Settings: 89mm, 1/100@f5.6. ISO500. Photo by Jenn Mishra
We can also highlight relationships between subjects in an image.
When using a shallow DoF, everything on one plane will be in focus.
It doesn’t
matter how far apart the subjects are horizontally. You can
cleverly use this to
emphasize a relationship.
Two subjects on the same
plane will pop out of an otherwise blurry scene.
With many subjects in the image, shallow depth of field allows you to prioritize
subjects.
Eye and watch are in focus. Settings: 50mm, 1/1000@f1.4. ISO100. Photo by Jenn Mishra
To Draw the Eye Away
The flip side to guiding the eye towards a focal point
is drawing the eye away. Blur can
de-emphasize a defect or anything
that could distract from your main subject. Whether
this is a crack in a
wall or a busy crowd.
One little-known use of a shallow depth of field is to remove visual
barriers from your
image. Visual barriers like fencing or mesh, get
between us and our photographic
subject.
This
bird is behind mesh fencing in a zoo. A shallow depth of field makes
the mesh disappear. Settings: 251mm, 1/400@f5.6. ISO1600. Photo by Jenn
Mishra
This is the same principle as simplifying a busy scene, but it has to do with the
foreground.
Wide apertures are effective if you’re shooting through a busy foreground. A
narrow DoF turns it into a soft blur.
You can even use shallow depth of field to obscure a person’s
identity. Other
elements of the scene can be in focus, but the person’s
face blurs.
This is a compromise for parents who don’t want to show their
children’s faces
on social media. A family scene can still be shared,
but with the child obscured.
To Create an Effect
Using a shallow depth of field softens the scene and creates a mood.
Which mood depends on your subject and how you use the blur. Soft
edges can
create a romantic or nostalgic look. Or by obscuring details,
the effect can be
mysterious.
Taking away details creates an impressionistic
scene. Take away even more detail
and you can create an abstract image.
We might only see an edge or part of an
object. What’s left of the
subject blurs into an abstract.
Creating an effect includes shaping the bokeh. Bokeh is the shape of
the out of
focus light.
The shape is usually round because that is the
shape of your aperture. But you can
change that by placing a bokeh filter in front of your lens.
To Layer and Frame
Blurring both your foreground and background creates a frame around
your subject.
Even mundane environments can be nice with a bit of blur.
Shallow depth of field adds dimension, but it also separates layers.
This is important
when creating 2D images from a 3D world. Layers that
our eyes detect don’t always
come across in the scene.
Shallow depth of field adds frame. Settings: 50mm, 1/2000@f1.8. ISO100. Photo by Jenn Mishra
Tips for Creating Shallow Depth of Field
Learning to control depth of field in my photography took some
practice. If you’re
not getting the results you’re looking for, here are a few tips:
Try a different lens – Lenses vary in how well they create
shallow depth of field.
Focal length and aperture affect depth of field,
but some lenses just seem to create a
nicer blur.
Move closer – Changing your relationship to your subject can make a big difference
in the depth of field.
Move subject away from the background – If you’re not getting a
shallow depth
of field in your images, make sure there is actually depth
to your field. Create
distance between your subject and the background.
Creating depth of field is all
Slowly, cautiously, I lay down on my stomach on the damp tundra. My long lens
reached out in front of me as I wriggled slowly forward toward my
unsuspecting quarry. Closer, closer I crawled, until the composition
finally resembled what I wanted.
I peered through my viewfinder, adjusted, and began to click the shutter.
In Alaska, Arctic Ground Squirrels are very common.
The snap of the shutter rang through the quiet like a gunshot and the
animal looked up, fixing me with an intense stare. Then, with a sudden
burst of speed, the ground squirrel turned, and scurried back into its
burrow.
Not all great wildlife photography is of predators or even large
animals. Some of the most compelling images are those of small
creatures: birds, insects, or as in the case above, ground squirrels.
Even creating images of common animals in your backyard, or local parks,
is a great way to learn the necessary skills for animal photography.
This post will go through a few things you should consider as you begin making images of wild animals.
Equipment
A 70-200mm lens was more than enough to capture this image of King Penguinsemerging from the Southern Ocean.
When I think about wildlife photography techniques, there are a few
things that stand out. Surprisingly, the first that come to mind have
nothing to do with equipment. However, your gear does play an important
role. Your kit for wildlife does not need to be huge, but a few things
will prove useful:
Camera- obviously
Telephoto- a long lens is a near-necessity in wildlife photography, and lenses from 200mm to 600mm are standard.
A wide angle – this one may come as a surprise, but I’ve made some of my favorite animal images with a wide angle
Tripod
What brand, sensor size, and type of camera you choose is completely
up to you. Many cameras, even some advanced point and shoots, will work
great for wildlife.
But don’t let you gear hold you back. Be creative and shoot with what
you have. You don’t always need a big telephoto lens, as my penguin
photo above shows.
Respect the Wildlife, the Environment, and Others
Showing interactions between wildlife species is a great way to create an interesting image.
Your absolute top priority as a wildlife photographer is to do no harm to the creatures and the environment you photograph.
Animals should always have a route of escape; don’t corner them. Pay
attention to their behavior.
If an animal begins to look agitated, back
off.
Whenever an animal flees, it means you got too close, and that animal
had to use precious energy to escape. Every time that happens, it is
additional stress for them, so don’t cause it.
Practicing
with common animals will mean you are ready when the real excitement
starts, like this image of two bears fighting in Katmai National Park,
Alaska.
Follow the rules
of the places we are photographing. Stay on trails, and respect other
users. More than once in my career, I have watched oblivious, or
disrespectful photographers rudely step in front of others to make a
shot, or tromp off a trail into a closed area. Please don’t be that guy.
Eventually, if we don’t police ourselves, someone is going to start
policing and restricting us. Your long lens, not matter how big, does
not grant you an exception to the rules.
Be a Naturalist
Research
informed me that to photograph early-season coastal Brown Bears in
southeast Alaska, I’d need to be there in late April.
The most important skill of a good wildlife photographer has nothing
to do with cameras or technique: Be A Naturalist. Get to know the
animals you want to photograph.
Find out where they live, what time of year they are present there, what they eat, and how they interact with their environment.
Not only will this knowledge help you find wildlife, it will also help you make better images.
You’ll know the story you want to tell, and quickly move beyond animal
portraiture, and toward compelling, story-telling images of wildlife and
their environment.
Get Low
On the photo workshops and tours I lead, the most frequently made
mistake by my students is also one of the easiest to fix. (Assuming, of
course, they don’t mind getting their knees a little dirty.) Get low!
Images of wildlife are almost always best when made from the eye level
(or lower) of the animal you are photographing. This might mean having
to go as low as laying flat on your stomach!
Images made from above lack a connection to the animal. I always
encourage photographers to get down on their knees, or better yet, lay
down. They’re all surprised by how much a lower perspective can improve
their photography.
Go Long
A long lens let me isolate the pattern of this sleepy King Penguin.
There is little question that a long lens is a vital part of any
wildlife photographer’s equipment. A telephoto lens plays a couple of
important roles, the first is the magnification.
A lens like a 500mm, will make the animal appear much closer, and take
up a larger portion of the frame. A long lens also allows you to cut out
distracting elements from your frame. You can take a narrow slice of
the scene in front of you, isolate the best parts and cut out the rest.
A telephoto also compresses your depth of field
(DOF). The DOF is the amount of the image that is in focus from front
to back in the frame. Long lenses are particularly good at blurring
foregrounds and backgrounds. This makes your subject stand out from
their surroundings.
Just as the magnification of long lenses allows you to isolate the best
part of your scene from side to side and top to bottom, a shallow DOF
allows you to isolate the best part from front to back.
Go Short
Long lenses are an indispensable part of a wildlife photographer’s
equipment, but not every wildlife picture has to be made with a long
lens. Wide angle lenses can actually make great photos, under the right
circumstances.
I was photographing on South Georgia Island a few years back, creating
images of a few nesting Gentoo Penguins. I was laying on my stomach with
a long lens, going for that low perspective I mentioned earlier, when
out of the sky above me, a skua descended and alighted just a foot in
front of me.
The bird, a scavenger, was curious about me (perhaps hoping I was
carrion), and kept inching forward, reaching out with its beak toward
the lens of my camera. I slowly grabbed behind me for my second body,
which was equipped with a wide angle zoom I’d been using for some
landscapes.
Slowly, I maneuvered the camera to my eye and snapped two photos of the
Skua. My motion and the noise of the camera made the bird realize that I
wasn’t dead or dying after all and it took to the air. But I managed to
get two pictures first!
Similar to the image above, this Caracara was curious about me as I lay on the ground photographing the landscape.
The wide shot I created is much better than anything I could have
created with a long lens under those circumstances. I was able to show
some interesting behaviour, and the bird’s habitat, complete with
nesting penguins in the background.
Those aspects are all important, and tell the viewer something about the wildlife and how they live.
Get Close
Just like my Skua image above, getting close to animals is a great way
to help your audience connect to them. You can get close by using a long
lens, or by getting close yourself.
Long lenses, as I noted above, are great for making an animal appear
closer. And when it comes to large, dangerous, or delicate wildlife,
this should be the only way you approach them.
However you do it, getting close to animals (without disturbing them) will offer a connection. Details will emerge like the textures in fur or feathers, eyes appear to glitter, and your viewers will begin to relate to the animal in the image.
How to get close is another issue entirely, but the best way is the
simplest: be patient. Simply placing yourself in a likely area and
waiting, is a tried and true method.
I’ve spent hours sitting quietly next to ponds waiting for waterfowl to
paddle past, and I’ve sat on mountain ridges as a herd of caribou moved
across the valley below. Though simple, this isn’t the same as easy.
It’s hard to be patient.
A discussion of other methods for getting close to wildlife warrant
their own articles. That said, blinds are a useful tool, and even
vehicles, in areas where animals are accustomed to them, can be a great
way to get close.
I was shocked on a recent safari in Botswana how close vehicles could
approach wildlife without disturbing them. Of course if I’d set foot out
of the Land Cruiser, the animals would have either spooked, or you
know, eaten me.
Get Sharp
To make a sharp image of wildlife with a long lens, you need a fast
shutter speed. A general rule of thumb is to set your shutter speed at
least as fast as the length of your lens.
If you are shooting with a 500mm lens, you need at least a shutter speed
of 1/500th second to create a sharp image. But really, if you are going
for sharpness, the faster your shutter speed the better.
Even applying the rule of thumb above, using some lens support will help
you achieve the sharpness you want. When possible, use a tripod. When
you can’t, brace off something instead. A tree, a car, even a rock might
work. Or you can lay down on the ground (getting that low angle) and
use your pack to support the lens.
Most lenses are sharpest a stop or two down from wide open. That means
if your fastest aperture is f4, you’ll get a sharper image around f8
than you will wide open.
Get Blurred
A pan blur of flying Sandhill Cranes.
Animals seem in constant motion. Birds fly by, caribou run, and
elephants swirl around water holes. Images that show some of that
movement in the form of a motion blur, can be very effective and compelling.
A stationary blur allowed the bear to remain sharp while the waterfall blurred to a flowing texture.
Creating a good motion blur requires some experimentation. Start by
slowing your shutter speed. For a long lens, a shutter speed of around
1/60th second is often more than enough to show sufficient motion blur
in fast-moving animals.
Start there, then adjust up or down until you get the amount of blur you want.
Late
evening in Africa meant very low light. Fortunately the slow shutter speed worked very well as this herd of elephants came into a water hole.
There are two methods to create these kinds of shots:
Steady Camera, Moving Wildlife – In this type of
image, the background and surroundings should be sharp, as your subject,
the animal, is blurred. A too-blurred subject will almost disappear in
the frame, while an image not blurred enough will simply look out of
focus. It’s a balancing act, and a tricky method to get right.
Pan Blurs – A panning blur is when you move your
camera to stay even with moving wildlife. This creates an image in which
both the background and the moving parts of the animal are blurred. The
best of these retain focus on the eye and head of the wildlife,
creating a sharp subject area in an otherwise motion-blurred image.
These can be extremely effective and beautiful shots, when done
correctly.
Pro-Tip: Focus on the Eyes!
The eyes are the first thing we look at, so sharpness there is doubly
important. If I hadn’t caught the eyes of this lion in focus, this image
would not have been successful.
Tell a Story
Caribou
migrating across the coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife
Refuge in Alaska is one of the iconic stories of wildlife.
In just about every kind of photography, the best images are those
that tell a story. In wildlife photography, those stories can be
dramatic, like predation in action. But they can also be simple.
An
image of an animal within its habitat is one way, or a simple
interaction between two individuals is another.
Think about the species you are photographing. How or where does it
live? What does it do to survive? Then consider how your image can tell
that story.
A
photo of a Black-browed Albatross in front of early sunlight, sea haze,
and a storm-tossed ocean proves that you don’t need to be close to
create a quality image of wildlife.
Wildlife photographers put a lot of effort into getting close. We buy
long lenses, or sit for hours in trees waiting for the right
opportunity.
But a close image is not always a great image. Nor is a distant animal a
poor shot. What matters, close or far, is the story, the relationship,
and the way your viewer relates to the subject.
Show how animals relate to one another! Here three lions interact in Botswana.
If you put all these things together, from equipment to camera
settings, perspective to story-telling, you’ll start creating great
wildlife photos.
Above all, make your wildlife photographs thoughtful. Think about your
creative choices and use them to tell the story of the animal. If you do
that, you will have much greater success, and create much better
images.
Darryl
T Creates a Fun Way to Get People to Take the Covid Vaccine
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