By Michael Mathews on Saturday, 18 April 2015
Category: Photography

Animals Just Won't Say "Cheese" - Taking Better Nature Photos

As should be apparent from this blog, I love taking pictures.  I always have.  At times I have gotten rather serious about it.  At one time I had a color darkroom and owned nearly a dozen nice cameras (mostly Nikons), lots of lenses and a mound of filters, flashes, battery drives, tripods, light meters, light umbrellas, etc.  

I am self-taught. Everything I know about photography I learned through trial and error while devouring book after book.  I have never had a photography class (although I have taught a few).  

At one point, I was very serious about photography, especially nature photography. I took hundreds and hundreds of pictures; reviewed my images critically; and used that self-criticism to get better.  

Then, just as I did with enjoying nature, I got away from photography.  While I always took pictures of family, certain events, and an occasional nature type photograph, it was on a much-reduced scale.  I went from taking hundreds of pictures a month to taking a dozen or less a month.  

With my return to nature, I also have gotten back to being serious about photography.  I am back to taking hundreds of pictures a month.  

There is a difference though. Before I was using 35mm film.  Now everything is digital.  My first cameras had a built-in light meter and no automatic features. My current cameras all have Automatic settings.  They also have a mind-blowing number of features, controls, and settings.  

I am thankful for having to learn with the older equipment because it forced me to learn about shutter speeds, f stops (aperture settings), and so many things that modern cameras do automatically, but not near as well as when you are controlling those settings in certain situations.  

Using digital cameras is a joy.  There are certain things I miss about film, especially the color depth in slide film. Overall, though, I love digital.  I am still learning how to enhance images the way I was able to do in the darkroom with film, but I am getting better at it.  It is a continuing learning process.

Here are some things that I have learned about photography, nature photography in particular.  

Tips For Better Nature Photographs

 

Nothing will teach you more about becoming a better photographer than getting out there and taking pictures.  Learn by doing.  No matter what you are trying to do, you get better with practice.  It will help if you review your images and try to determine what you did wrong; what you can do to make it better; and then go out and try again.

 

 

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