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Elephants Krueger - Advice on LightHi
Took this pic a few months ago in Krueger Park ZA. I like the pic just dont think its that great as i believe it is too bright. Is anyone able to suggest something for dealing with the light when the sun is high? Cheers
Luke
Re: Elephants Krueger - Advice on LightHi Luke
You have taken the image 'against the light' (contre jour) and you have achieved a typical result. There are 3 ways to overcome this problem. Move around to the other side of your subject...(the side that has the sun shining on it) or...spot meter off your elephant so that he is correctly exposed, (increase exposure by 1 or 2 stops), or lastly..expose as normal but use a flashgun to brighten your main subjects. I would be hesitant to use a flashgun on an elephant. Regards
Matt. K
Re: Elephants Krueger - Advice on Lightluke just to add to matt's post. the angle of the sun in relation to your front lens element has also washed away loads of contrast which is why its so dull and soft looking.
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Re: Elephants Krueger - Advice on LightMain issue is the flare across the image: the sun was shining into the front of your lens.
Did you have the lens hood mounted properly? Also, if a dark grey elephant features in the frame your camera will try to make it mid-grey if you're shooting in something like aperture-priority (Av). You'd want to use some -ve exposure compensation. But I don't think that's the issue here as much as the flare from the sun.
Re: Elephants Krueger - Advice on LightHi All
Thanks for the advice, this is helpful albeit obvious to most on the forum. (Not me) I am pretty sure the lens hood was mounted properly. Hopefuly next time i can get the Elephant to turn and stay still. Cheers
Luke
Re: Elephants Krueger - Advice on LightDaveB
Elephants are living breathing grey cards. No exposure compensation needed. Regards
Matt. K
Re: Elephants Krueger - Advice on Light
In 2006 I was in Tarangire NP in Tanzania photographing elephants. I usually use manual exposure, but at one stage the light kept changing (clouds covering/uncovering the sun) so I switched to aperture-priority. Had a few issues with the photos were I didn't get the exposure compensation right. Sure the elephants come out mid-grey by default, but they weren't all meant to be mid-grey! The darker ones caused my skies to blow out. Luckily highlight/exposure recovery in CameraRaw let me save most of those shots where I screwed up. Luke, at least you were using a hood! But they can't save you from all flare, especially when you're shooting towards the sun. Also, if you had a filter (e.g. UV) on your lens that would have probably made the flare worse.
Re: Elephants Krueger - Advice on LightMatt,
I believe that you always carry a couple around wherever you go. g.
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