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Posts Tagged ‘Butterfly’

10 Tips for Great Butterfly Photos

20 Jun

Butterflies are wonderful subjects for photographs, but not always the easiest subject to shoot. You don’t have to wing it anymore, and let good shots be a product of chance. Follow these tips and you’ll come home with some great butterfly photos.

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1. Consider shooting with a telephoto macro lens

To shoot close-ups of butterflies, you’ll want to use a telephoto macros lens. To get great shots, you need to get close to the butterfly, and having a 100mm or longer macro will help. If you don’t have a macro, don’t be discouraged, you can still make great shots with your zoom lens, you’ll just need to shoot more of the environment, but you can make beautiful images that way too.

2. Find a location with flowering plants that attract butterflies

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Specific plants, such as the butterfly bush, are known to attract butterflies. See if you can find a location in a park, zoo, or arboretum that has a flower garden with plants chosen specifically to attract butterflies. The more subjects you have to photograph, the better your chances are at nailing the perfect butterfly shot.

3. Pick a spot and wait for the butterflies to come to you

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Once you’ve found your garden, find an area that seems to have a lot of butterflies around. While photographing butterflies in flight seems like a great idea, it’s pretty difficult, and it will likely leave you frustrated.

Take a minute or two and just observe. Butterflies seem to come back to the same flower over and over again. Just watch, then pick a flower and wait for the butterfly to come to you. I usually choose a flower that is in the shade. Harsh shadows take away from the beauty of the photograph. I also watch the background to make sure that it compliments the butterfly.

4. Use a monopod or a tripodHow-to-shoot-butterflies1

If you use a tripod, don’t lock it in. Leave the head loose, to give you some flexibility. I like using a tripod over a monopod for shooting butterflies. It helps me keep the camera in place and ready, and I can take my eye from the viewfinder as I watch and wait for them to come to my flower. Using a tripod also helps me to frame my photo ahead of time to keep the background very clean.

5. Shoot in manual exposure mode

In a situation like this, I prefer to shoot in manual mode. When I am focused on one particular area, the lighting, and therefore my exposure, isn’t going to change, or at least not very much. I like to shoot at least 1/500th of a second. I prefer to use a wide aperture for a narrow depth of field. But, if you are just starting out, give yourself a break by using an aperture that will give you more depth of field – f/8 would be a great starting point and you can adjust from there.

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6. Focus on the butterfly’s eyes

Some photographers like to focus on the wings, I choose to make sure the eye is as sharp as can be, and if the wings fall off focus a little bit, that’s okay. It’s easier to use a bigger depth of field, like f/8 or f/11, so I encourage you to try that first.

I like to use a smaller f/stop in order to throw the background out of focus. It is much more challenging to shoot that way, but I like the effect it gives. It makes the butterfly really stand out from the background instead of blending in to its surroundings.

7. Shoot the butterfly in profile

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If you are using a larger aperture, and shallow depth of field – shoot the butterfly in profile. That way, you have more of the butterfly in focus. I also love to see how the antennae stands out from the background, and love the details of their legs. Yes, there is beauty in the wings, but there is also an awe in those tiny legs that support the butterfly, as well as its tendril. Look beyond the obvious, to details for outstanding photographs.

8. Shoot tight as well as loose to capture the environment

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Notice the differences between the photographs above and below. It’s the same species of butterfly, in the same field of flowers – but one shot is cropped tighter and one is framed looser, with more space around the butterfly. Both are successful. Take note in the top photograph, how the antennae are framed with the orange flower to make them stand out. If my angle had been such to have the darker green in the background, it may not have been as successful.

Also note that the orange in the wings mimics the orange flowers. Shooting great butterfly shots goes beyond just taking sharp photographs of wings!

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9. Break the profile rule (above)

I love this photograph because it feels like this butterfly is moving forward, into a new place. The head is sharp and the lower wings fall out of focus due to the narrow depth of field, but in this case, it really works because it pulls out attention to the butterfly’s eyes, and into the photograph. It gives the viewer the feel of looking over the shoulder of the butterfly into some new place.

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This photo is successful because it moves beyond recording what the wings look like and creates a mood and sense of movement and anticipation.

10. Have patience and have fun!

Beautiful butterfly photos take time and patience, but they are worth it. If you don’t get it your first time out, keep trying. It’s a great chance to hone your skills and you might get an amazing shot.

Please share your questions and butterfly images below and also remember to post them on the weekly challenge: Butterflies and Bugs happening here.

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The post 10 Tips for Great Butterfly Photos by Vickie Lewis appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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HTC reveals camera-focused Butterfly 3 and One M9+ ‘Supreme Camera’

30 Sep

Just when you thought HTC’s smarpthone line-up couldn’t get any more confusing, the Taiwanese manufacturer has launched two new models, both with a focus on camera capabilities and performance. Read more

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Being Madame Butterfly With Tina Wong

16 Jun

Tina Wong shares her latest work from her photo series "Madame Butterfly" as featured on Fashion Photography Blog (FashionPhotographyBlog.com)FashionPhotographyBlog.com was able to catch up with another of our past Photo of The Week winners, the fashion photographer, stylist and fashion editor, the triple threat talent that is Tina Wong. I was so glad to have her drop in to catch up and see what she has been up to since taking the winning photo from her “J’adore” series in her round of Photo of The Week.

It seemed that Tina had been making great strides with her career, as she revealed that, “There have been so many great experiences. The past few seasons I’ve been able to shoot at New York Fashion week, working on the 100-women print publication was a great experience as the photos were printed in a coffee table type magazine, I’ve been able to shoot for amazing clients in Miami and photos were used for large print advertisements.”

With all her successful achievements to date, where is Tina now at as a photographer? She shared that she has been “Shooting Fashion for 7 years now and I still have a way to go! I feel like with the saturated market for fashion photography, not only do you have to have talent and work very hard to master your craft but you need to know how to market yourself and get exposure with the various publications and clients. I work with a lot of smaller commercial clients and magazine editorials but feel like it’s time to take the next step but it will take proactive actions from my part to get there.”

So what has the difference been between shooting her winning photo and how she shoots now? Tina explained that “I feel like my style has matured through the years and my unique voice is emerging. It’s gone from bright lifestyle-like commercial photography to a quieter more romantic one. I call it quiet beautiful, when you look at someone and you try to admire them like a flower in a vase in an empty room, and then you see an unshielded unfiltered beauty. I know my equipment more and I know how to control my lighting more as well which is something that comes with time.”

Speaking of lighting, I asked if there has been any change to how the photographer set up her lights since taking her winning photo, Tina nodded and explained that “I think I’ve become a minimalist. I used to try more than 1 Profoto head to light the model and create different effects but I’m starting to like just 1 head or natural light with a reflector.”

While discussing her lighting preferences nowadays, Tina also shared with me one of her recent works from a series entitled “Madame Butterfly”. A truly beautifully crafted photograph, I was intrigued to uncover the story behind it. The photographer explained that the “Inspiration behind the butterfly photo was to try to capture how a rose looks like when a butterfly is on it… still and beautiful. I wanted a darker edgier undertone, not just pretty butterflies. Some of the photos on the series almost had her smoking a butterfly like a cigarette, also, I used the butterflies as her brows and whited out her entire face to create a more ghastly and eerie feel to it.” To shoot this photo the photographer used 1 Profoto head (Profoto Prohead Plus), a 5ft Octobox, 2 foam cores.

You can find out more about this shoot and contact Tina Wong’s via her website (www.tnastudios.com) or email at photography@tnastudios.com


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Up close: The beauty of butterfly wings

03 Apr

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Some look like impressionistic paintings, while other look like colorful ribbons. It’s hard to imagine the subjects of British photographer Linden Gledhill’s macro photos are actually butterfly wings. A biochemist by training, Gledhill says, ‘I’m completely enchanted by the physical world around me and obsessed by its natural beauty. My career in science has magnified this feeling of awe’. See gallery

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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One Light – Butterfly Lighting

11 Feb

How to setup simple butterfly lighting.

 
 

Rain ~[MV]~Bi Beautiful Butterfly ???? ~

22 Jan

Edit Song beautiful Chinese song ????………her English name is YoYo? Chinese name? is called ???Pronunciation is xinran??she have many beautiful song ———— New Fanvid Please do enjoy this BEAUTIFUL Chinese Song i edit for Rain Nature Republic and Mix with some of his Sensual pic and add along CM Nikon D300 CF [ 60s] CAMBODIA edit Fugitive Plan who star Jiwoo and waterfall along his pic ect.. and Army Live performance Expo this all what i can put together i hope all like this i very love the song so Nice enjoy~ ^_~ ————— a beautiful chinese song ????Butterfly Tattoo ??mv www.youtube.com

 
 

Van Dogh – Butterfly – solve the riddles, play with children – Preschool cartoon

24 Oct

Cartoon videos, show for children, puzzles and visual riddles to play with toodlers and kindergarten. Van Dogh is painting a butterfly when their friends come. The kids change the picture and know the butterfly is on a typical vehicle. Do you know what is it? Synopsis: Won, Pan and Kit, ride their tricycles through colorful, Spring-like paths, knowing they’ll find Van Dogh on their way. He shows them the magic in his brushstrokes, where shining stars mix his drawings and transform them into puzzles. Every day, the imagination of Yon, Pat and Kit, shall have to face the challenge of solving such these visual and colourful enigmas, while with his funny suggestions, Van Dogh fills their meetings with lots of laughter. Cartoon series that helps the development and stimulation of imagination and creativity of children through entertainment. Videos of games for children © Motion Pictures, SA Production – www.motionpic.com Format 104×4′ – 3D HDTV Target: Preschool More Van Dogh cartoon videos: www.youtube.com Subscribe to Channel: www.youtube.com Other cartoon videos: www.youtube.com Motion Pictures in social networks: Twitter – twitter.com Facebook – www.facebook.com Pinterest – pinterest.com

www.boxerhockey.com This film was animated entirely in Flash CS3 with some audio editing done afterwards in Premiere. This was my graduating thesis film for my final year at SCAD. It turned out alright, I think. I would have liked to do something more ambitious, but being that I was working alone for the entirety of the film and had other projects in production at the same time I had to keep things simple. The animation is mostly very pose-to-pose and nothing too visually impressive, but at the very least I hope it to be entertaining to someone. Enjoy.

 
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The Butterfly Dragon

20 Oct

Animation from COFA student Sushan Yue, winner of the Wacom Award for best 2D work at the 2010 COFA Annual Awards.

 
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Butterfly Girl Photoshop Tutorial: Applying Digital Makeup and Photo Editing with VIPtutorials.com

01 Aug

Working with a photograph and being able to apply digital makeup without altering the original image is very important. In this tutorial you will learn Photoshop techniques of photo retouching by using layers, coloring modes, adjusting hues and saturation. Adding digital props into portrait photography and changing color of your background will finalize the look you want to achieve. Have fun!?

 

Butterfly Girl Photoshop Tutorial: Applying Digital Makeup and Photo Editing with VIPtutorials.com

01 Aug

Working with a photograph and being able to apply digital makeup without altering the original image is very important. In this tutorial you will learn Photoshop techniques of photo retouching by using layers, coloring modes, adjusting hues and saturation. Adding digital props into portrait photography and changing color of your background will finalize the look you want to achieve. Have fun!?
Video Rating: 4 / 5