How You Can Take Great Bird Photos
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Review by the Travel Photography Workshop

How You Can Take Great Bird Photos examines the techniques and provides tips for you to improve your photography skill when shooting birds.


Author: Autumn

One of the most popular types of animal photography is bird photography. Taking great bird photos in the wild can be very challenging, but you can create lots of photo opportunities right in your own backyard.

Setting up your Backyard Photo Shoots

The biggest challenge isn't actually attracting birds to your yard. Once feeders are out and discovered, word will get around fast! The biggest challenge with bird photography is getting the birds to land right where you want them. So before setting up your feeding stations and birdbaths, consider the locations carefully.

Choose locations that won't make the birds easy prey for cats and other predators, and at the same time that will provide you with the opportunity to photograph them with nice backgrounds and good angles.

Do remember that if you set feeders out in the winter to consistently provide quality seed so your feathery subjects aren't filling up on something like bread that won't provide them with the energy needed to stay warm at night.

Birdbaths also provide good photo ops, and birdhouses will help encourage birds to hang out in your yard.

If your goal is to attract certain types of bird species, check with The Audubon Society to see what types of seeds or plants are best (as some birds won't eat at a feeder). You can also find good tips at the National Wildlife Federation's "Gardening for Wildlife" pages at http://www.nwf.org/gardenforwildlife/tips.cfm?campaignid

Don't limit your photographs to the bird feeders and baths either. These will help attract birds to your yard that will land on tree limbs and fences nearby, so make sure to scout these areas out with your camera in hand.

Camera Settings

Have you ever noticed that birds are in almost constant motion? When eating, their little heads are bobbing up and down, and when they are on the ground they are always looking this way and that for predators. The best camera setting for bird photography is a high shutter speed, so use either the Sports Mode on your camera or set the shutter speed to be at least 1/250.

If you have an optical zoom on your digital compact or a telephoto lens on an SLR, this will make shooting pictures a whole lot easier. An optical zoom of 6x, depending on the camera, can give you about the same magnification as a 200mm lens, meaning a photograph taken from about 10 feet away could look like a close up.

Some of the so called "bridge cameras" offer zooms from 10 to 20 feet, but not all produce quality results so check around before purchasing. You may also need a tripod or some other way to stabilize your camera when using high range zooms (and if you use a high range zoom always opt for an optical zoom).

Given a long enough lens, you can get some wonderful pictures of birds in flight or perched high up in trees too. Professional nature photographers will often use a 600 lens to capture images with good detail of birds in flight or far away.

Telephoto lenses of this size are very expensive, but there is another way, brought to us from birders. It's called digiscoping. With this method, you combine the birder's spotting scope with a digital camera. Here is one of many excellent articles talking about the digiscoping method: http://www.birdwatchersdigest.com/site/photography/index.aspx

Blue skies are best for pictures of birds in flight. And the time of the day when the sun is most blue is often the hour after dawn. Also, look for patterns when you may have flocks of birds that fly over your yard at certain times of day. Or, if you want to photograph birds of prey, such as osprey, go to a lake or river early in the evening when they fish. This is also a good time for soft, even and warm lighting.

Hopefully by using these tips, you'll not only attract more birds to your yard for more bird photo opportunities but capture some fantastic pictures that you'll be proud to display.

About the Author

Autumn Lockwood is a writer for YourPictureFrames.com and loves photography. Your Picture Frames offers a large selection of photo frames with free design assistance to help you find the perfect picture frame. We offer many different sizes and colors of frames such as our elegant white picture frames. Shop online and see our website or call 1-800-780-0699.


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