Taking Terrific Photos of Your Dog
| by Hope Saidel | December 02, 2005
Dogs have a wonderful sense of humor. The moment you turn on your camera they stop doing whatever made you reach for it. Great pet pictures do happen, just not as often as wed like.
The keys to great pictures of your dog are planning and patience. Fortunately, with digital cameras, we no longer have to worry about the expenses of film and developing. We can take dozens of pictures and only print the perfect shot no one has to know how long it took to take!
In order to take great candid pictures of your dog, the first step is to get Sparky accustomed to the sound of the camera. If you just turn it on randomly, without taking any pictures, it will become background noise that your Fluffy ignores. If Spot only sees a camera occasionally, its going to be something new and different he has to investigate. What dog owner doesnt have a gorgeous close-up of canine nostrils in the back of the picture box?
The next step is to add the shutter sound. Dont aim the camera, dont try to focus on anything in particular. Remember, well be deleting these pictures. Its another layer of sound Fido will learn to accept.
The addition of flash may cause a setback or two. Rovers not going to enjoy that bright light any more than we do and he doesnt know what its for. You may want to add a distraction at this point take a flash photo at the same time you throw Benjis favorite toy. Sooner or later, Scruffys going to learn that taking pictures is just another weird human behavior.
At this point youre ready to get those great candid shots. Be sure the cameras ready, too. Keep those batteries charged!
If your goal is a more formal portrait of your dog - youre in luck! Its actually easier to get Princess to pose than to be cute. Once again preparation is the key.
Get your background in place, whatever it is. Set up the props you want to use, look through your viewfinder at all corners and borders. Make sure theres nothing in the shot that you dont want there. Use a stuffed animal as Fifis stand-in to make sure the floor lamp isnt growing out of her head. Set up a stash of treats near where youll be shooting but keep them out of Pumpkins reach.
Next step: take Bruiser out and play ball, vigorously, for five or 10 minutes. You want to take the edge off, so he is happy and expectant, but not too fresh to focus. Come back in, let Lucky get a drink, put the toys away for now. Give Brutus a little primp run a comb through his hair and wipe off any drool - and take him to your photo shoot. Keep things happy and upbeat.
Since youve set up in advance, all you need to do is tell Trooper to sit and stay, turn on your camera and shoot. Reset and repeat. And repeat. And repeat. Sooner or later, one of you will be too tired to resist. If its Precious you finally get the shot you want. Print, frame and enjoy!
The keys to great pictures of your dog are planning and patience. Fortunately, with digital cameras, we no longer have to worry about the expenses of film and developing. We can take dozens of pictures and only print the perfect shot no one has to know how long it took to take!
In order to take great candid pictures of your dog, the first step is to get Sparky accustomed to the sound of the camera. If you just turn it on randomly, without taking any pictures, it will become background noise that your Fluffy ignores. If Spot only sees a camera occasionally, its going to be something new and different he has to investigate. What dog owner doesnt have a gorgeous close-up of canine nostrils in the back of the picture box?
The next step is to add the shutter sound. Dont aim the camera, dont try to focus on anything in particular. Remember, well be deleting these pictures. Its another layer of sound Fido will learn to accept.
The addition of flash may cause a setback or two. Rovers not going to enjoy that bright light any more than we do and he doesnt know what its for. You may want to add a distraction at this point take a flash photo at the same time you throw Benjis favorite toy. Sooner or later, Scruffys going to learn that taking pictures is just another weird human behavior.
At this point youre ready to get those great candid shots. Be sure the cameras ready, too. Keep those batteries charged!
If your goal is a more formal portrait of your dog - youre in luck! Its actually easier to get Princess to pose than to be cute. Once again preparation is the key.
Get your background in place, whatever it is. Set up the props you want to use, look through your viewfinder at all corners and borders. Make sure theres nothing in the shot that you dont want there. Use a stuffed animal as Fifis stand-in to make sure the floor lamp isnt growing out of her head. Set up a stash of treats near where youll be shooting but keep them out of Pumpkins reach.
Next step: take Bruiser out and play ball, vigorously, for five or 10 minutes. You want to take the edge off, so he is happy and expectant, but not too fresh to focus. Come back in, let Lucky get a drink, put the toys away for now. Give Brutus a little primp run a comb through his hair and wipe off any drool - and take him to your photo shoot. Keep things happy and upbeat.
Since youve set up in advance, all you need to do is tell Trooper to sit and stay, turn on your camera and shoot. Reset and repeat. And repeat. And repeat. Sooner or later, one of you will be too tired to resist. If its Precious you finally get the shot you want. Print, frame and enjoy!
Article Source: http://www.articleset.com

You are welcome to publish or reprint this article free of charge, provided:
- you include the entire article, unchanged, including the "About The Author" box
- all hyperlinks remain active, including the bottom ArticleSet.com link (does not apply to print publications)
- you agree not to hold the authors nor ArticleSet.com liable for any loss profits, expenses, or any other damages resulting from the use or misuse of articles published on this website