Close-Up Photography in Nature
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Average customer review:Product Description
This is the guide for great close-ups of plants, animals, insects and small landscapes
For this updated edition, master photographer Tim Fitzharris includes the latest developments in digital photography and how they affect close-up nature photography. He shares his proven techniques for capturing once-in-a-lifetime images and inspires both amateur and professional photographers to improve the quality and beauty of their work.
Packed with reliable information and expert advice, the book covers:
- Traditional and digital methods in nature photography
- The latest information on lenses, filters, flashes, reflectors and tripods
- Tips for choosing the best equipment
- Techniques on focusing and exposure
- Color, composition, lighting, themes and center of interest
- Anticipating where wildlife is likely to be found
- Working with PhotoShop and other digital imaging software.
Both the technical aspects and the creative side are discussed in detail. Along the way, Fitzharris shares tips for photographing everything from frogs to hummingbirds, from wildflowers to small still lifes.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #584584 in Books
- Published on: 2008-02-15
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 112 pages
Features
- ISBN13: 9781554073559
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
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Editorial Reviews
Review
[Review of previous edition] A good instructive and inspiring manual with techniques explained simply and clearly... vast array of illustrations. (Elizabeth Roberts Outdoor Photography )
[Review of previous edition] An inspiring, practical guide for photographers who want to capture nature in all its glory. (Joy McDonell Canadian Camera )
About the Author
Tim Fitzharris is a critically acclaimed photographer known by his colleagues for his regular column in Popular Photography and Imaging magazine. He is the author of 25 books, including National Audubon Society Guide to Nature Photography, National Audubon Society Guide to Landscape Photography, Rocky Mountains: Wilderness Reflections and Big Sky: Wild West Panorama. He lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
(200509)
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Introduction: Nature's Studio
The tiny frogs were all around me, yet I could not find even one. I turned off the flashlight and moved cautiously into the darkness and deeper water. The swamp's bottom, partially glazed with left-over winter ice, was hard and slippery in some places, sucking muck in others. Half-submerged deadfalls added to the precarious footing. The atmosphere was saturated with the sound of my quarry -- spring peepers. The steady, electronic jingle of their mating chorus was mesmerizing and soon, just as the night had left me blind, the frogs' song stole my hearing.
Handicapped in this way, I soon stumbled, gasping as murky water poured into my chest waders. With one hand holding the camera out of the soup, I struggled upright and switched on the flashlight to regain my bearings, waiting for my body to take the icy edge off the water that sloshed inside my waders.
The commotion had momentarily silenced the peepers. The flashlight's yellow beam played weakly over the cattails as my eyes groped for one of the camouflaged amphibians. The peeping started some distance away but was quickly drowned by a single voice that began to reverberate all around me. At length, I spotted the frog right beside my boot, sitting just above the water on a cattail stem. A small, glistening jewel, it was about the size of the end of a finger. As it sang, its translucent throat pouch bubbled out, showing a thin network of veins stretched over its surface. Excitedly, I got the camera ready.
Unlike the photographs that resulted from this experience (see page 103), the close-up images that you see of frogs and other small creatures are often made under controlled studio conditions indoors -- usually with excellent results. There are fine guidebooks available to show you how to do this (see the appendix). This volume deals primarily with how to photograph plants and animals by existing light amidst the beauty of the natural environment. The text is aimed at those who understand basic photographic principles and who have experience shooting nature subjects. Current techniques of close-up photography based on the use of modern auto-focus, auto-exposure, dedicated TTL-flash cameras are explained.
Also provided is introductory information on computer imaging, a technique which replaces conventional darkroom procedures such as dodging, burning, and creating special effects and composite images. These skills are applicable whether your computer creations are generated from scans of conventional film or directly from images captured with digital cameras.
It will not be as easy for you to photograph frogs today as it was for me to shoot the spring peepers 20 years ago. In North America most of the frog's habitat of swamps and marshes has been drained and replaced by cities, suburban sprawl, and industrial and agricultural development. A sinister decline of frog populations, even in protected areas, is being charted by scientists worldwide. Frogs, of course, aren't the only small critters that are losing their battle for survival.
The spring woods are not yet silent but they are headed in that direction. Due to habitat destruction, forest fragmentation, and pesticide use, song bird numbers have declined 50 percent in the last two decades. Never to be seen again over the prairies and foothills of Texas, Colorado, or Alberta are the 400,000 migratory Swainson's hawks killed in their winter home in Argentina by pesticides in part developed and marketed by American chemical companies with the aid of the U.S. government. Such examples abound.
These declines in wildlife populations will persist as long as we permit politicians to measure human success in terms of their shortsighted, self-serving policies of relentless economic growth, ever increasing GNP, and a refusal to deal with the basic issue of human overpopulation; as long as we allow their greedy patrons, big industry and its perverted stepson, big media, to seduce us and inoculate our children with the empty ideals of materialism. Unless this self-destructive agenda can be rewritten, it seems more than likely that the quality of our lives will continue to deteriorate while frogs, song birds, and other creatures are added to the list of endangered and extinct species.
Customer Reviews
Mostly Pictures, not very informative.
If you are looking for a book with a lot of nice pictures, then this would be for you. If you are looking for a book to learn the technique of close up photography, this is the wrong book. The book is 80% pictures and only has very basic information on close up photography. Not a good source to learn from.
nice, but...
First the good stuff: loads of nice photo examples, with explanations.
Bad, IMO: writer talks a lot about what I'd call "faking it": combining plants yourself, chilling reptiles and amphibians in the freezer before shooting, combining photos using photoshop.
I'm not against using photoshop to remove an errant spot or branch, and combining photos or prepping subjects might work in some cases too, I'd just not call them "close-up photos in nature" anymore. Which is what I thought this book was about.
Anothere great Tim Fitzharris book!
As expected, this book is full of valuable advise and fantastic photos. I have come to expect this of all Tom Fitharris's books, and have never been dissapointed. Close up photography requies special techniques, and often equipment as well. Tim masterfully explains the techniques and expertly reccommends the required equipment needed to accomplish the task.



