Animals in their natural environment is this week’s challenge.
Every week I will propose a new challenge, it is a topic that you will have to capture in photo and upload it to the Facebook page of the blog by putting in the description the keyword that I will indicate for each topic. Topics range from portraits to macrophotography, landscapes, black and white photography, or babies. The themes will be offered on Saturday, so you have the whole weekend to work. You’ll have one week to upload your photo (one photo per participant), until Friday of the following week. Friday or Saturday I will update the article with the photo that most captivated me and propose a new theme, and so on?
- Photographing your pet on the couch to practice animal photography with her is good.
- But this week I suggest you take one more step in your learning to photograph.
- Your pet is already domesticated and will remain silent as long as you need it.
- Besides.
- It’s very comfortable.
- Is that your environment?That’s no longer valid.
You have to go looking for a small animal that is in its natural environment, not yours; PI I want to see nature, I want you to practice concentration with a moving animal, that’s scary?Use the tools at your fingertips, a TV, a macro?It doesn’t matter, but stay away from the sofa and show us animals in nature, in nature, with their customs, their habits?And give us a smile or leave your mouth open, but practice!
As usual, to participate in this week’s challenge, take your photo to the Facebook wall of the Photographer’s Blog: In the photo description, please mention the keyword?Animal challenge in nature? Followed by a title of your choice.
For those who are not from Facebook, I have enabled the participation of new social networks.
Good picture
Look how many animals you sent us in your environment! This is just a small sample, if you want to see more, browse the galleries of Flickr, Facebook or Twitter Thank you!
This week I want to highlight Heiidii Miller’s photograph titled “Cardinal Between Branches. ” When looking at the composition, the author used various techniques to highlight his center of interest, this beautiful red bird. One of them is the famous three-thirds law, although he also used natural framing with branches, color contrast and depth of field. In this way, it was ensured that attention is immediately directed to the bird and that it stays there, as it does in the branches. I also like it because it is taken at the same height, not from below as the human eye would be used to seeing this scene. If I go a little further, looking for a second reading, I find it. This image seems to me a metaphor for the freedom of the birds. By not having space in front of the gaze, it conveys the crushing and suffocating sensation that a caged bird must feel, in this case between the branches and luckily it can escape, it is at home, in its environment, if it is trapped it can break a branch and fly away but? What if these branches were the bars of a cage? Thank you, Heiidii, for giving us this moment of nature and for making us think of animals in captivity.