Black Dog
Awhile ago there was a post about a black dog and how difficult it is to take a photo and get detail in the dog without totally blowing out the background.
Unfortunately I can't find the post. :cry
I ran down to my neighbors today and borrowed their dog for a few minutes. He is very black and shiny.
Here is what I got.
Sam
Unfortunately I can't find the post. :cry
I ran down to my neighbors today and borrowed their dog for a few minutes. He is very black and shiny.
Here is what I got.
Sam
0
Comments
Perhaps the comment pertained to a dark dog on a dark background? That's a tough one.
I cope with both - black dog; black horse. Always looking for suitable backgrounds. Both more a lot so forget about slow shutter speeds. Up the ISO, open the Aperture and hope a lot!
http://www.imagesbyceci.com
http://www.facebook.com/ImagesByCeci
Picadilly, NB, Canada
www.SaraPiazza.com - Edgartown News - Trad Diary - Facebook
You really nailed the exposure in both of these. I prefer the composition of the first but on my (uncalibrated laptop) screen, there seems to be a yellow/green cast on the dog, perhaps reflected light from the surroundings.
That's the one! I hope Mary stops by and sees this post.
Again this was a ten minute, grab the camera, grab some kibble and try to calm down a bouncy energetic Lab.
Sam
The trouble with the first thread seems to have more to do with metering in a larger environment. The dog represents such a small part of the overall exposure that if it's not "average" and you use evaluative metering; you'd want to overexpose a bit to compensate.
http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100003085685580
https://www.facebook.com/#!/photo.php?fbid=1639767517198&set=o.35007936858&theater
The photographer generously shared her technique with me:
"Sophie was on my bed, but right across from her was a window with sunlight coming in! I sat between the two, and got my settings right so that my shutter was fast enough and enough light was coming into my camera, and also used NO flash! So basically the key is LOTS of natural light on the dog's face!"
I think another key element is how she controlled the background; using natural light on the dog with a subdued interior wall behind was inspired. She also had the dog's full attention, got catchlights in those gorgeous eyes, and later added a nice vignette.
I stopped by
Great shot The first one .. the eyes and the flowers behind the dog match up good. Wish I had the sunshine and the elements you had in your shot. Mine was a 'grab it quick' on a crappy day with a whole lot of stuff in the photo.
But ... I did get another neighbors black lab pup trimming up the neighbors hedge Haven't had a chance to edit them yet, but I had more light and snow to help reflect upwards onto the dog. Will post them soon.
You definitely showed it can be done
www.Dogdotsphotography.com