Showing posts with label how to photograph fall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label how to photograph fall. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

5 Tips on Taking Fantastic Autumn Photographs

First day of school here in Michigan!  And the weather is cooperating!  About 70 degrees and partly sunny!  The days are getting shorter!  Soon the tr ees will begin to turn into the awesome shades of red, yellow, and maroon!  Are you ready???

Here is a wonderful article on taking fabulous autumn photographs!

By Ian Plant

Make a Mirror Reflection

Round Pond, Adirondack State Park, New York
Tripod-mounted K.B. Canham DLC45 view camera with 150mm f/5.6 Rodenstock Apo-Sironar- N lens; 2 sec at f/22 on Fujichrome Velvia 50.

Windless conditions are critical for achieving mirror-like reflections of autumn color in water. But an uninterrupted mirror can create too static a picture. Instead, look for rocks or logs in the water to break up the reflection and to provide a visual anchor to help strengthen your composition.

Another key factor: the angle of the light. I made this photo at sunrise, when first light started to strike the peak autumn color. Plan to be on location for sunrise and sunset to capture moody autumn shots—midday sunny weather won’t provide nearly as much drama.

Don’t worry, though, if you don’t have ideal weather every day. Fall often brings cool and moist conditions— a magical recipe for fog, morning dew, and striking sunsets and sunrises. I love it when so-called bad weather moves in, as unstable weather can often result in the most photogenic conditions.

And don’t stop shooting when peak color fades. Sometimes you can make the best photographs when the trees stand bare and fallen leaves carpet the forest floor. You'll find poignant images in a mostly bare tree with just a few lone leaves still clinging to the branches.

Post-peak also offers a great time for you to look for scenes of streams and waterfalls with rocks covered with leaves.

If an early snow or frost comes your way, you can also show the transition between autumn and winter. Tip 2: Capture Color Combinations

Aspens, Acadia National Park, Maine
Handheld Canon EOS 5D Mark II with 17– 40mm f/4L Canon EF lens; 1/160 sec at f/16, ISO 400.


Everyone loves bold autumn color juxtaposed with a brilliant blue sky. Frame the most vibrant sunlit reds and yellows against the sky to create the strongest color scheme; including a few puffy, white clouds can’t hurt, either.

For the photo above, I pointed my wide-angle lens up for this dizzying view of aspen trees. The sun was included for compositional interest, and a small aperture was used to create a sun star.

You can use a polarizing filter to darken skies and increase contrast with clouds. (I did not use a polarizer here, as the camera was at the wrong angle to the sun and, with this wide a lens, the sky would’ve been darkened unevenly.)

Blue sky, though, is not the ideal lighting for other types of scenes. Overcast light often works best for streams and waterfalls, as in the shot below, and a little bit of drizzle can really help to saturate autumn colors. In situations like this, a polarizer, by reducing reflections and cutting through glare, strongly enhances color.

Polarizers also act as neutral-density filters, reducing light without shifting color, which allows me to use a longer shutter speeds.

It’s never been easier to ID the right place and time for peak autumn color. The Weather Channel (www.weather.com/activities/driving/ fallfoliage), Foliage Network (foliage network.com), and other websites let you monitor fall color progression. A number of sites are dedicated to specific areas of the country—do a search for yours. Watch out: Color peaks earlier at higher elevations, and this may not always be reflected in online reports.

Tip 3: Scatter Leaves

Second Falls of Cedar Run, Shenandoah National Park, VA
Tripod-mounted K.B. Canham DLC45 view camera with 90mm f/4.5 Nikon Nikkor SW lens and polarizer; 8 sec at f/32 on Kodak Ektachrome 100VS film.


Autumn is one of my favorite times to shoot because it’s one of the few times I’m not completely at the mercy of the landscape and the light. As I hike along a trail, I like to gather fallen leaves, looking for the most colorful. When I arrive at my shooting location, I strategically scatter them in order to enhance the scene.

This works particularly well for waterfalls and streams (sprinkle rocks with color), and intimate still lifes (add a splash of leaves to a shot of bracken ferns). Just make sure that your scattering looks natural—too many leaves facing color-side up are a dead giveaway that the scene has been arranged.Tip 4: Isolate Colors and Detail

Ausable River, Adirondack State Park
Tripod-mounted K.B. Canham DLC45 view camera with 450mm f/9 Nikon Nikkor-M lens; 4 sec at f/45 on Kodak Ektachrome 100VS film.


create compelling images by photographing autumn color­—but not the trees—reflected in water. In the photo above, the foliage of the trees on the opposite bank was sunlit; the water, was in shadow, so I was able to create color contrast between the warm tones and the rocks lit by cooler light from the blue sky.

For an even more impressionistic effect, photograph reflections in blurred moving water, such as a fast-flowing brook or mountain stream, or rippled lake water on a breezy day. Experiment with exposures of 1/2 sec or longer to capture a pleasing amount of motion blur. Don’t go too long, though, to avoid smoothing out the water and reflections too much. Zoom in with a telephoto lens to exclude all but the most colorful reflections in the water; rapids and boulders can help enhance the scene.

When photographing reflections, a polarizing filter can help to bring out the colors if you dial it up only slightly—a little bit of polarization can enhance the scene, but too much can reduce or eliminate reflections.

While you’re zooming, look for intimate still-life images. A 70–200mm lens (for full frame) is perfect for such scenes. I like to capture the details that help tell the story of the changing of the seasons. Look to zero in on a distant autumn hillside, dew-covered leaves carpeting the forest floor, or just a dash of fall color reflected in a still lake.

Don’t focus all your efforts on trees—plenty of other flora, such as ferns, blueberry bushes, and other ground plants, take on autumn hues. Pattern photos of bracken ferns are an autumn classic; ripening berries are also another cue that fall is in the air.Tip 5: Create Fall Abstracts

Tree trunks, Adirondack State Park
Handheld Canon EOS 5D with Sigma 50–500mm f/4.5–6.3 DG OS lens and polarizer; 1/2 sec at f/32, ISO 50.


This season is a great time for making impressionistic motion-blurred images. Although wind often creates problems when photographing autumn foliage, you can use it to your advantage. So if it starts to blow too hard for sharp shots, switch gears and go for motion blur.

Look to take photos of wind-blown foliage using long exposures of 1/2 sec or more. Such images usually work best if some portion of the scene remains stationary, such as a solid tree trunk surrounded by wind-blown autumn foliage. Use a tripod to ensure that stationary objects are rendered sharp in your photo during the long exposure.

No wind? Try creating your own motion blur by moving the camera during a long exposure to create interesting abstract blurs, as I did in the image above, where I swiped my camera vertically. This technique works well when photographing forest scenes with lots of color. About 1/2 sec to 2 sec of exposure time usually works best with this technique.

Great Places to Shoot

Green Mountains, VT: This pleasant mix of quaint rolling farmland and hillsides covered with brilliant red maples always makes the top of everyone’s fall color list.
White Mountains, NH: Don’t miss the Kancamagus Scenic Byway, which cuts
through some of the most dramatic autumn scenery in the mountains. Adirondack Mountains, NY: The Lake Placid region has stunning mountain scenery, and countless alpine lakes and brooks make for perfect reflection photos.
Acadia National Park, ME: Famous for its rocky coast, this is leaf-peeping paradise, with red blueberry heath atop Cadillac Mountain and maple forests below.
Lake Superior, MN: The north shore has thundering waterfalls and towering cliffs. The fall color under Superior’s stormy weather often yields dramatic images.
West Virginia: Blueberry bushes on the Dolly Sods plateau blaze red in early Oct. Canaan Valley peaks a week or two later. Blackwater Canyon’s mix can’t miss.
Great Smoky Mountains National Park, NC and TN: Some of the finest fall color in the southern U.S., with a dramatic range of elevations for a variety of tree species and peak foliage times.
Blue Ridge Parkway, NC and VA: With 469 miles of mountains, waterfalls, and rolling hills, there’s no end to the photographic possibilities.
Shenandoah National Park, VA: D.C.-area residents are just two hours away from sweeping mountain vistas and bold autumn foliage.
Upper Peninsula, MI: Hot spots include the Porcupine Mountains, Tahquamenon Falls, and south shore of Lake Superior at Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore.

Visit our online store and see some of our autumn photographs and greeting cards!
Appleberry Photography

Thursday, August 29, 2013

How to photograph autumn!

Another fantastic article by Canon

Autumn begins around late September, bringing with it a seasonal change that inspires photographers across the nation: Fall foliage. Autumn’s dramatic landscapes are stunning to behold and the challenge is how to preserve the impact in a still photograph that captures the unique quality of this season.
An autumn-colored tree is a subject unto itself. It is a time where a photograph of a simple tree can stand on it’s own and, in most cases, break all the rules of composition. There’s just something special about a tree (or landscape full of trees) turning brilliant colors this time of year. However, if you take it a step further -- give the tree some dramatic lighting, throw in a compositional aid such as a creek or road, make use of color filter effects, and think carefully about framing and composition -- then you’re on the right track to making a great photo that doesn't just rely on pretty colors.
Location, location, location
In New England, most scenes will include scenic structures such as a picket fence or a quaint steepled church. The mid-Atlantic states and mid-west regions will have large areas of rolling hillsides, with possibly some farming composition opportunities. The West has grand mountain landscapes with pockets of color and majestic mountain peaks. The color starts up north and works it’s way south like an ocean wave. There are many helpful web sites that chronicle foliage progress and colors through the country, for example:  The Foliage Network, The Weather Channel,  the US Forest Service, and The Sacramento Bee, to name but a few -- and countless others that are specific to regions, states, and even neighborhoods.
Out west, the colors seem more influenced by altitude than latitude. At the 10,000 ft. level foliage can be in full color by September 21st, most years. Foliage in the 4,000-5,000 ft. altitudes will usually see color the end of October.
The CDLC contributors are compensated spokespersons and actual users of the Canon products that they promote.

Get Closer
The temptation of wide shots, of entire forests or mountainsides may be hard to resist. However, variety is important. Shoot the panoramic landscapes, but also remember that beauty can be found in the details.
Macro photography is a great way to explore the colors and textures of autumn, while also using unique points-of-view.
Another way to get closer is simply zooming to a longer telephoto setting, or switching to a tele zoom lens. Telephotos are great for isolating parts of subjects, and they usually will throw your backgrounds beautifully out of focus. Try focusing close with that telephoto lens – with many of today’s zoom lenses, you can fill the frame with a single large leaf.
Out-of-focus backgrounds are a photographic effect you can heighten, or reduce, by controlling your aperture: wider apertures will result in a shallower range of focus, and soft backgrounds. Smaller apertures will increase the range of focus, resulting in sharper backgrounds. You’ll need to make the creative choice depending on what, and how much of the background you want to see in the image.
Take the time to consider the background, and experiment with more dynamic ways to make your main subject stand out
Don’t forget the power of wide-angle lenses. A standard zoom lens, such as an 18-55mm lens can produce some spectacular results – especially if you move in close at its widest setting and focus upon one object in the foreground. A low-hanging branch with leaves can suddenly become a broad burst of color and detail, if you move in and focus upon the nearest leaf.
Lighting
Most photographers will agree that lighting is the most important ingredient in a photograph; with foliage it really is, because understand how to use sunlight to your best ability will make those fall colors as bright and vivid as you want them.
Shooting during the ‘magic’, or golden hour, generally during the first half-hour right after the sun rises in the morning, and the last half hour just before the sun sets at the end of the day. During these times, the quality of light is ideal for autumn landscape photography: the sunlight is naturally warm, rich, and golden-hued - further enhancing the colorful leaves. The angle of the sunlight is lower and more directional helping create enhanced textures and shapes using it as side-light, or increased depth if used as a backlight.
The quality of magic-hour sunlight is more diffuse, with a pleasing contrast that is less likely to overexpose in the highlights, or underexpose in the shadows.
Ambient and overcast lighting bring a completely new set of opportunities. These forms of lighting are diffused, or non-directional, and will produce shadowless subjects and render your colors in soft pastel shades. On overcast days you only have to remember to keep as much white sky out of your frame as possible. Fall showers can inspire beautiful photo opportunities, as well. Fall colors can look even more saturated during or right after a rainstorm, and moody skies can offer that perfect contrast to the colored foliage. Use a macro lens and look for details such as raindrops clinging to the leaves.
Shoot some back-lit pictures, with the sun coming toward the camera and shining through leaves. Back-lighting can really increase the rich color of fall foliage. Move the camera to use other leaves to block the sun and shade the lens in order to reduce or eliminate the lens flare.
Exposure
The secret to metering any lighting situations is to fill the frame with the light you’re trying to photograph. This can be accomplished three ways: First, you can move closer to the subject to fill the frame - but this can be difficult if you’re framing some trees with a distant mountain in the background.
The second solution is to use the longest focal length on your zoom lens, or a long telephoto prime lens, to crop your frame tightly onto your main subject, and meter it in isolation from distracting elements in the scene that may otherwise confuse your meter. Then, reposition the lens/zoom out to the correct focal length for the best composition and plug in the right exposure.
The third and easiest metering method is to use the spot-metering mode on your camera, and let it do the work for you. After enabling the spot mode, place the spot over your main subject, set your exposure (either by manually adjusting the shutter speed/f-stop using the exposure meter in the viewfinder, or hold down the shutter button HALF-WAY if you’re using an auto mode), then move the camera for proper composition, and fully depress the shutter release to take your photograph.
Bracketing
One way to make sure you always have a usable exposure is to use the automatic exposure bracketing (AEB) feature on your camera. This is a menu item and can be set for 1/3 stop to 2 stops on most models and can produce a sequence of three exposures. The professional EOS-1D series cameras can bracket up to 7 exposures. Another setting you should consider is the 'continuous shooting' setting in the drive mode. This allows you to keep the shutter pressed and take all of your bracketed exposures in rapid sequence.
Canon’s low-noise at high ISO sensors are ideal for capturing fall foliage. Using ISO 400 allows shooting most daytime scenes at 1/125 second at f/11 with a polarizing filter. If a breeze comes up and makes the leaves move too much, move to 1/250 second at f/8 and use the ‘sweet spot’ of the lens for maximum sharpness. ISO 800 is also available if needed.
In addition to using the AEB feature, consider shooting your foliage images in RAW mode, which will give you much higher image detail in under- and over-exposed areas, and many options to manipulate the image using exposure, white balance, contrast, shadow/highlight details, Picture Style information, and many other correction tools in Canon's Digital Photo Professional.
You can find a series of video tutorials covering every feature and function of Digital Photo Professional, the free RAW processing and image editing application that comes bundled with every EOS camera on the Canon Digital Learning Center: Digtial Photo Professional (v3.8+) Tutorial Videos
Playing With Color
Once you find the perfect scene for your photos, consider how to not just capture the colors, but how to really make the most of them in a way that compliments your overall image.
The camera's white balance settings will help create different tonal effects. Simply switching from Automatic White Balance (AWB) or Daylight to the Shade or Cloudy modes will add a warm, golden hue to your image. Also try to shift your camera's white balance towards amber or amber/magenta to add warmth to the image. (You can easily do this with the White Balance Shift/Bracket feature, a menu option on most recent EOS digital SLRs).
Take a custom white balance (such as with an ExpoDisk Portrait, or blue WarmCard White Balance Reference) to create a golden cast to your photos. In your RAW images, if there is something white or neutral grey, try using the "click" white balance feature when you view the images in the DPP.
Remember that contrast can help colors to 'pop' – for example, the warm tones of autumn leaves will be enhanced with the subtle inclusion of something cool (blue, or blue-green) in the frame. For example, a vivid sliver of sky, or a blue-painted automobile or house strategically placed in the foreground.
As a reminder, White Balance settings are 'locked in' to JPEG images, but can always be changed when processing a RAW file.
Picture Style, and Other Enhancements
Canon's Picture Style can help create just the look and feel you want in your fall foliage shots. You can select one of the preset styles, such as Standard, Portrait or Landscape. For fall foliage, Landscape gives the greatest default level of saturation, emphasizing blues and greens. It also boosts yellow objects with added saturation. The added sharpness and saturation even adds vividness to foggy/overcast scenes.
Another Picture Style you may want to try is Canon's "Autumn Hues". This one isn't preset in cameras right out of the box, but can be downloaded free of charge from Canon's web site and uploaded into your camera. You can find this, and several other specialized looks at the Canon Picture Style Special Site. You can also create your own Picture Style, using Canon's Picture Style Editor software and store it in the camera's memory for future use. If you prefer to shoot in the .JPEG format, whatever Picture Style you choose will be 'locked in' to the image file.
If you shoot in the RAW format, you can always add or change your Picture Style in Canon's Digital Photo Professional (DPP) Software. First, use the Detail Settings within Canon's Picture Style to increase the contrast and color saturation of your images, for brighter colors and more definition. Then, download and install your custom, special-purpose Picture Style Files into your camera.
The Canon Digital Learning Center has a series of instructional video tutorials on the features and functionality of Canon's Picture Style Editor, a free application bundled with every EOS camera, used to selectively modify any existing picture style or even create your own, found here: Picture Style Editor Tutorials.
High Dynamic Range (HDR)
Another technique to try is High Dynamic Range imaging (HDR). There are two HDR methods:
Multi-image HDR is created by combining several images of different bracketed exposures, taken at the same time in rapid sequence. This is the traditional method, and depending on the amount of bracketed images your camera can take, offers the widest range of exposure and tonal detail to create your HDR image. However, the challenge with using this technique with foliage is the amount of movement from frame to frame with wind blowing the branches, leaves moving, clouds passing across the sky, and other uncontrollable elements.
Where subject motion is possible, as with landscapes, the single-image process may be preferable. It starts with a single RAW image - from there, you make several lighter and darker exposures using RAW processing software such as Canon's Digital Photo Professional. Then use a editing program such as Photomatix or Adobe® Photoshop® to combine those images and create an expanded dynamic range. You can create HDR effects that range from subtly increasing detail in the highlights and shadows, to much more dramatic effects that surreally exaggerate the colors and tones in your scene.
As of September 2012, the EOS line includes two DSLRs with in-camera HDR processing: the EOS 5D Mark III and the recently announced EOS 6D. This allows for the capture and creation of bold HDR imagery, without the need for any additional software or editing time. To learn more about how to use this creative feature in the EOS 5D Mark III, click here.
Thinking Beyond Color
The most difficult part of fall foliage photography for most people is simply finding the right subject. Ironically, it's easy to be distracted with the color, so that actual subject content and scene composition are less important that the leaves. The secret to overcoming this challenge is to start by getting rid of the color - that way you can concentrate on finding the perfect subject, composition, and lighting, to 'hold' the color. To do this, try using the Monochrome Picture Style mode.
How will Monochrome Picture Style help you? Your images will appear in B&W on your camera's LCD, and without the distraction of color, you will be better able to find that perfect combination of scenic composition, point of focus, angle of light, subject texture, etc. These are the elements that will make your photos really powerful.
Please note that if you shoot in JPEG your Picture Style is locked in - so the monochrome image you capture in camera will ALWAYS be a monochrome image. If you shoot in RAW you will preserve all the original color information in the photo, allowing you to produce a finished color or B&W photo - even if you originally shot it with the Monochrome Picture Style.
If you prefer shooting in Monochrome Picture Style, EOS cameras also allow you to simulate the effect of applying traditional yellow, orange, red, or green filters used with B&W photographic film. When using the color filter effects, the B&W tones are portrayed differently, depending on the color. Basically, each filter will lighten its own color tones, and darken their complimentary tones. For example a green filter will lighten green grass and darken reds or yellows, such as warm skin tones. The red filter will lighten the deep reddish or golden tones of autumn leaves, and darken a blue sky, resulting in a very dramatic effect.
Filters
There are three types of filters that are most commonly used in the field to create effects or control lighting in ways that contribute to an effective and beautiful photograph.
The first is the circular polarizer. The circular polarizing filter performs three functions in varying degrees. It deepens a blue sky, adding drama while minimizing atmospheric haze and reflections. When shooting in the mountains all three can be incorporated in one shot but usually we are looking to eliminate the reflection of the sky off each leaf surface to saturate the colors and then deepen the blue sky -- just rotate the filter until everything looks more vibrant.
The other two filters are related: the neutral density, and graduated neutral density filters. These filters come in varying densities and are used by themselves or in combinations to reduce the amount of light coming through the lens without affecting color. This enables use of long exposures that allow images with moving water captured with a nice blurred effect. Neutral density filters come in several calibrated levels: rated as .3, .6, .9 and ND 1.2 , with each .3 rating representing one stop of light. Therefore the .6 ND filter would reduce light by two stops, the .9 ND filter reduces light by three stops and the 1.2 will reduce by four stops of light. These filters can be stacked in any combination to achieve the desired amount of light reduction needed in brightly lit circumstances or when used for longer exposures.
The graduated neutral density filters come in the same ratings, but are clear on the bottom and slightly opaque on the top, with either an abrupt (hard edge ‘grad’) or a gradual shift (soft edge ‘grad’) in the middle. They are used to darken the brighter part of a scene so that it falls within the dynamic range of the camera.
Stabilization
One way to improve the over-all quality of your photographs is to use a tripod. Using a tripod accomplishes a few very important goals: It allows you to shoot at slower shutter speeds than you would normally get away with, even with an Image Stabilized (IS) lens. Second, shooting on a tripod tends to make photographers more aware of their horizontal and vertical level, and you will notice right away if the horizon is not perfectly straight or if your subject looks off-balance in the frame. Lastly, even the fairly minimal effort it take to set up and level a tripod makes you work slower and more deliberately, which can help photographers to notice imaging possibilities they may have otherwise missed with faster, hand-held shooting.
Summary:
Autumn is a great opportunity for all photographers to make some really colorful and outstanding photographs. There are few subjects as universally inspiring as fall foliage. Remember to look for different ways to shoot familiar subjects, whether it's up-close, down low, with filters, after dawn, or during a storm -- and you will find it pay off in many wonderful, dynamic shots that capture the spirit of the season.

Colors are more vibrant in the Fall!   Here is a photo of rust mums!  Love the colors of Autumn!



 
Please visit our online store for more Autumn photographs! 
 
Appleberry Photography 


Wednesday, August 28, 2013

How to photograph Autumn!

School will open next week!  Fall is definitely around the corner! Here are more tips to capture one of the most beautiful seasons of the year!

  1. Look at your leaves and find some that have unique and interesting patterns and colors.

    • Be sure that the leaves are not too thick. You want to be able to get some light through the leaf.
  2. 2
    Decide when you want to shoot. Late morning or early evening. That is called the 'Golden Hour' and has the best light for those types of photos.
  3. 3
    When you are choosing a leaf for your photography, keep an eye for attractive backgrounds. You want it to complement your leaf.
    • Also, make sure that they aren't 'busy'. If there is too much going on in the photo, the leaf won't be seen. It will blend in or be over-powered by the background.
    • With Autumn leaves, perfection isn't perfect. An imperfection can make the shot much more interesting.
  4. 4
    Set your white balance. You will want to be sure that your white balance is correct. It will help greatly with the seasonal colors.
  5. 5
    Just add water. The water could be from condensation or that you have supplied. This can add some great interest to your photograph.
  6. 6
    Set up the tripod and camera in the approximate places where you will be photographing.
  7. 7
    Keep a close eye on the sun (light source), your subject leaf, and any interesting photos that you might see.

Photograph in the Window

  1. 1
    Choose an eastern or western most window. Which one you choose depends on whether you are using the morning or evening light. East is the morning light and west is the setting sun.

  2. 2
    Clean the window on both sides. Don't assume the window is clean, clean it. You would be amazed at how every little speck will show up in a photograph.

  3. 3
    Clean off the leaf. Unless you are wanting to get the look of the extra dirt, clean it off. Dirt can be distracting.
  4. 4
    Decide how you are going to shoot it. Do you want to shoot the whole leaf, parts of it (macro), however else you might want to do it.
  5. 5
    Fasten it to the window. You can do this with masking tape without worrying about the tape messing up the window. Duct tape will leave traces behind.

On the Tree

  1. 1
    Decide how you want it to look. Do you want the unique colors of the sunrise or the sunset, or do you want the
  2. 2
    Find the leaf or leaves that you want to photograph.
  3. 3
    Set up the tripod for its best angle. You will want to take into consideration how you want the finished product to look. Do you want it backlit, side lit, etc.
  4. 4
    Do what you can to reduce the amount of wind that the leaf is exposed to. This is when a poster board or reflector comes in handy. There will still be some current coming around the block, but it should be significantly less.
  5. 5
    Look at the sun and determine how you want to use it.
    • Is the sky gray? That makes for great diffused light
    • Want the direct light of the sun? Step your aperture all the way down. This will give you a great depth of field.
    • Want to use shadows creatively? Choose late morning or early evening. The sun will be coming from low in the sky and help with some beautiful shading.

    Things You'll Need

    • DSLR
    • Macro lens (or closeup lens setup)
    • Tripod
    • A source of light (window, sun, light box, etc)
    • Masking tape (needing for fastening leaf to window)
    • Remote release (or remote cable)
    • Polarizing filter (this will help make your images more vivid)
    • A way to clean your window or glass (window cleaner and cloth)
    Courtesy of:  Wiki How

    Here is  one of our Autumn Photos! 

    Please visit our online store!
    Appleberry Photography