#NatGeoTravelStories // Follow our account this weekend as @magnumji shares images from a recent expedition to Antarctica and South Georgia Island. #9 Look Up! Most photographers will tell you that if you are photographing animals you should get down on their eye-level. The difference between an animal photo that makes you connect with the animal and one that diminishes the animal is often a matter of inches and feet. To get down on an animal's level and shoot into their eyes allows the viewer to see the animal from their perspective, which is infinitely more interesting than how you are used to seeing animals (towering over them). I think that's good advice, however I'd even go one step further and tell you to try getting below the animal you are photographing. It's a lot easier to control the background (which is often a distraction) and it also shows a really interesting perspective not often seen. To get this shot, I was flat on my belly, rolling around in penguin poop on the beach with my camera in hand. I don't think my jacket will ever fully be free of that penguin poop smell (which is one of the rankest smells you can imagine). I can always buy another jacket, but how many times will I get the chance to photograph penguins in Antarctica? Probably not a lot. The lesson: be sure to try a different angle when photographing animals, and don't be afraid to get a little dirty doing it. Photo by @magnumji #natgeoexpeditions #natgeoantarctica

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National Geographic Travelのインスタグラム(natgeotravel) - 4月6日 06時47分


#NatGeoTravelStories // Follow our account this weekend as @magnumji shares images from a recent expedition to Antarctica and South Georgia Island.
#9 Look Up!
Most photographers will tell you that if you are photographing animals you should get down on their eye-level. The difference between an animal photo that makes you connect with the animal and one that diminishes the animal is often a matter of inches and feet. To get down on an animal's level and shoot into their eyes allows the viewer to see the animal from their perspective, which is infinitely more interesting than how you are used to seeing animals (towering over them). I think that's good advice, however I'd even go one step further and tell you to try getting below the animal you are photographing. It's a lot easier to control the background (which is often a distraction) and it also shows a really interesting perspective not often seen. To get this shot, I was flat on my belly, rolling around in penguin poop on the beach with my camera in hand. I don't think my jacket will ever fully be free of that penguin poop smell (which is one of the rankest smells you can imagine). I can always buy another jacket, but how many times will I get the chance to photograph penguins in Antarctica? Probably not a lot. The lesson: be sure to try a different angle when photographing animals, and don't be afraid to get a little dirty doing it. Photo by @magnumji #natgeoexpeditions #natgeoantarctica


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