Shooting Nature Photos to Print
- One of the most important lessons I learned in 2019 is shoot photos with the format in mind.
- It’s taken me a couple years to learn this lesson. My photography business probably would have been more successful early on if I had learned it earlier.
- But that’s the journey of any journeyman; the path to mastery is a long one.
- This means, if your goal is to sell prints, shoot a photo that will look good on someone’s living room wall.
- If you want to sell coffee table books, take photos that pop out of a large, glossy page.
- If you want to sell stock, make sure there is room for copy and have a use in mind.
- If you wish to sell the photo to websites, children’s books, print it on a calendar, or sell it to a tourism board, keep the client or medium in mind when you click the shutter.
- The only one of those examples I will be focusing on here is print.
- I hope to make the majority of my income on prints because the thought of my artwork hanging on someone’s wall delights me.
- There is no greater compliment than a person deciding your work is so good they want to look at it every day.
- So, when I frame up a beautiful animal and scroll my shutter speed and aperture wheels, I keep that format in mind.
- Lately, I’ve decided this means doing a lot of minimalistic photos.
- I recently realized while having a conversation on the topic with my brother that to make a photo look good in a room, especially a wildlife photo, it should be simple.
- While there are exceptions, complex, colorful, cluttered images may look great on a computer screen, but hanging in an elegant space they can clutter the room.
- However, a minimalistic photo hanging on the wall can add to the peace and beauty of that space.


- One of the easiest ways to make a photo simple is by limiting or eliminating color.
- A photo with just one or two main colors, like the Great Blue Heron above, is minimal and elegant.
- The Red Fox pictured above uses three main colors (orange, green, and gray) but keeps a minimalistic look.
- The fox is the only thing capturing your eye in the photo.
- There are no distracting elements such as tree branches, other animals in the background, or too many colors.
- Shooting minimalistic photos is not easy.
- When I photographed the Red Fox above, I came home with several terrible images among the good ones.
- One of the number one tips to getting minimalistic photos is to get low to the ground.
- The photos I shot of the fox when I was standing up looking down on it looked like they had been shot by someone who had just picked up a camera for the first time.
- I don’t even want to show them here out of embarrassment.
- Staying low to the ground helps isolate your subject from its environment and get a softer background to the image, as the background is usually further away than the ground it is walking on.
- Another tip is to use a lens with a wide aperture.
- I know this is not possible for everyone. Wide aperture lenses are expensive and often bulky and heavy to carry around.
- Both photos above were shot with a Sigma 120-300 F2.8.
- I highly recommend an F2.8 lens if it’s feasible as it creates the most amazing bokeh in the foreground and background, which adds depth and eliminates distracting elements.
- If you must make do with an f/5.6 or f/6.3 lens, the key is to get closer to your subject while getting into a position that pushes the background further away.
- This will ensure that you isolate your subject and remove distracting background elements like sticks, branches, and stones.
- Any thoughts on what makes a picture “hang-on-the-wall-able”? Tips on how to make photos more minimalistic? Let me know in an email! I’d love to learn from you.
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