1) Take a lot of pictures of your subjects. Use different angles and zoom levels if you have a zoom. The more you take the better your odds. This works for me. Cost of taking digital photos = zero.
2) Review your shots on the pc before posting to flickr, snapfish, facebook etc. Throw out the bad shots and post the good ones
3) Try to avoid putting your main subject in the exact center. If your camera forces you to focus on the center spot, after focusing, keep the shutter button pressed half-way and recompose.
4) Remember that bright sunlight at mid day is the worst lighting for just about anything, especially people shots. Move them into the shade if possible
3 and 4 require you to forget everything that your parents or Kodak every taught you
5) If you must photograph people in direct sunlight, try turning on the flash. This may seem counterintuitive but it often helps. If you don't believe it, try "before and after" shots with and without flash.
Any questions? Post them here and I'll try to answer!
Happy Shooting
About Me
- The Puffin Man
- Arlington, MA, United States
- Here's the boring stuff: Born and raised in NYC. Learned how to use a camera at 13, but was so bad in art that I stopped taking pictures by 25. Then I took up birdwatching in my early 40s, trained myself how to see pictures, started marketing images 10 years later.
Ode to a Puffin
Hello and welcome to the Puffin Man blog
I hadn't met a puffin until June 4th, 2009 and now 3 months later, I'm publishing a Puffin-centric blog, photo-site and web store! . In 15 years as a bird photographer, I was never inspired to open a website called "The Mallard Man", "The Heron Man" or the "White Ibis Man" ..........
So why puffins?
The answers lie on the rocks of Machias Seal Island, Maine and in my photo galleries.
Viewing the Puffins was an incredible experience
Even with my planning I was overwhelmed by the number of birds and the spectacle that greeted me. Luckily I remembered to take pictures and filled all my 4gb media cards. "Take many shots, cover many angles" and use "auto-bracket"(3 different exposures for each shot.) Those are my trade secrets!
A Big Audience
These images are very special for me because I got to spend a brief but intense time living amongst the puffin colony and many hours viewing them on my monitor. Judging by the number of comments and hits on my galleries, some other people were able to enjoy the experience with me.
Hence, the Puffin Man website, blog and store!!!
I hadn't met a puffin until June 4th, 2009 and now 3 months later, I'm publishing a Puffin-centric blog, photo-site and web store! . In 15 years as a bird photographer, I was never inspired to open a website called "The Mallard Man", "The Heron Man" or the "White Ibis Man" ..........
So why puffins?
The answers lie on the rocks of Machias Seal Island, Maine and in my photo galleries.
Viewing the Puffins was an incredible experience
- The creatures are as cute, lovable, and strikingly beautiful in person as they are in the photos and trinkets you see in gift shops.
- Most of us tend to "anthropomorphize" about animals we see. There's the wise old owl, the cuddly bear, the wily coyote metaphors based mostly on physical features. "Owls really aren't very wise at all", a raptor expert recently told me. Try cuddling up with a bear, grisly or otherwise; you'll get mauled or worse. Can we know what a puffin is thinking or feeling? Nope. Yet, the indelible impression they make is one of joy, cuteness and need I say it, "humanity".
- With the exception of my visits with captive parrots, I've never felt so much personal interaction with birds. Were the puffins really checking me out with curiosity when they peered up at me? Maybe. Those who landed with a few feet from my camera lens were definitely making "good, eye contact" with their visitors.Yes, these Puffins probably would do well in an interview!
- The photography gods were with me on both puffin trips
- My photographic "technique" is usually to show up and shoot. While most professional nature photographers stress the value of "planning" and "pre-visualization" I rarely heed that advice. But I knew that chances to photograph puffins are few and brief, unless you're a harbor seal. (the number and length of visits to Machias Seal Island are tightly restricted by wildlife authorities)
Even with my planning I was overwhelmed by the number of birds and the spectacle that greeted me. Luckily I remembered to take pictures and filled all my 4gb media cards. "Take many shots, cover many angles" and use "auto-bracket"(3 different exposures for each shot.) Those are my trade secrets!
- A lot of Photoshop editing
A Big Audience
These images are very special for me because I got to spend a brief but intense time living amongst the puffin colony and many hours viewing them on my monitor. Judging by the number of comments and hits on my galleries, some other people were able to enjoy the experience with me.
Hence, the Puffin Man website, blog and store!!!
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