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Photography Q&A
Suggestions on Photo's Of reptiles indoors
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<blockquote data-quote="FastGlass" data-source="post: 437705" data-attributes="member: 13822"><p>Few things come to mind. Try and avoid shooting through glass. No matter how hard you try you will get reflections from either the glass your shooting through or the glass on the back of the container the subject is in. If using a flash. get it off camera as the on camera flash tends to produce flat images with no depth or dimension. If using a speedlight of some kind and can't get it off the camera then bounce it. Also just keep an eye on your backgrounds. If shooting something like a lizard on a table. So many times I see normal household items in the background which distracts you from the main subject. Just hold some kind of backdrop behind it. Most likely the backdrop will be out of focus so use your own judgement as to what to use.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="FastGlass, post: 437705, member: 13822"] Few things come to mind. Try and avoid shooting through glass. No matter how hard you try you will get reflections from either the glass your shooting through or the glass on the back of the container the subject is in. If using a flash. get it off camera as the on camera flash tends to produce flat images with no depth or dimension. If using a speedlight of some kind and can't get it off the camera then bounce it. Also just keep an eye on your backgrounds. If shooting something like a lizard on a table. So many times I see normal household items in the background which distracts you from the main subject. Just hold some kind of backdrop behind it. Most likely the backdrop will be out of focus so use your own judgement as to what to use. [/QUOTE]
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Suggestions on Photo's Of reptiles indoors
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