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Whether taking wildlife or flowers, the easy option is to shoot either by standing and raising a camera to your eye level and looking ahead, or by bending over and looking downwards. The perspective gained from our normal eye level – some 2 metres above the ground – is quite different from that seen by mini-beasts that scuttle around on terra firma.

Fiddler crabs have periscopic eyes with 360° vision that sense the slightest movement, causing them to make a rapid scuttle back down their burrow. Having failed to get a decent shot either by using a telephoto lens or by crouching over a camera on a tripod, I decided to reduce my profile by lying prone on a wet tropical beach and wait for the crabs to come within reach. This worked a treat, with one crab crawling inside the lens hood – far too close to focus the lens.

A male fiddler crab emerges from its burrow to feed at low tide on a Red Sea beach in Egypt. Captured with a 105mm maro lens, the crab

A male fiddler crab emerges from its burrow to feed at low tide in Egypt. Captured with a 105mm macro lens, the crab ‘pops’ from the background.

To gain a reflection of a relaxed brown bear in a pool at Hallo Bay in Alaska, a 500mm lens allowed for a speedy low-angle shot.

A 500mm lens allowed for a safe low angle shot of a relaxed brown bear plus its reflection at Hallo Bay in Alaska.

The best way of showing an organism, whether it be a small flower, fungus, an invertebrate, amphibian or reptile within its habitat, is to shoot low with a wide-angle lens that focuses at close range, yet shows the habitat beyond.

Crouching low with a wide angle lens, simulates a crab

A low wide angle lens, simulates a crab’s eye view of spiny cockle shells on a sandy beach in Pembrokeshire, Wales.

A low camera angle and a 24-85mm wide-angle lens set at 38mm, gives added impact to Australia’s largest lizard – the perentie goanna.

A low angle with a 24-85mm wide-angle lens at 38mm, gives added impact to a perentie goanna – Australia’s largest lizard.

A low angle reveals the ripples created by the current streaming past emergent water crowfoot, Ranunculus aquatilis, flowers.

A low angle reveals the ripples created by the current streaming past emergent water crowfoot, Ranunculus aquatilis.

The first shot I took of water crowfoot was with a short telephoto lens from above. Only when I bent down low to pack my gear away did I see the ripples created by the emergent stems that showed the shadows alternating with the sky lit ripples. Proving it always pays to try an alternative angle.

A tripod always helps to refine the composition when taking a static flower or a fungus. Whether using a tripod or not, to avoid having to lie prone to get your eye close to the viewfinder, use either a right angle viewfinder or a swivel live view screen.

A Benbo tripod is speedily adjusted from normal eye level down to a worm’s eye view simply by unlocking a single lever, adjusting the angle of all three legs and the centre column before relocking.

Gitzo tripods without a centre column can be speedily collapsed down to ground level. This one is fitted with camouflage leg warmers.

Gitzo tripods without a centre column can be speedily collapsed to ground level. This one has camouflage leg warmers.

Shooting down onto pollinators from above rarely reveals how they feed on nectar or pollen, because the body invariably hides the mouthparts. However, by getting down to their level, the large flat proboscis lobes of a hoverfly can be seen lapping up pollen from any flower with open access.

A macro lens captures a marmalade hoverfly as it laps up lily pollen using a broad proboscis. In the process all the legs pick up sticky pollen which gets transferred to the next flower it visits.

A macro lens captures a marmalade hoverfly as it laps up lily pollen using a broad proboscis. In the process all the legs pick up sticky pollen which gets transferred to the next flower it visits.

Hand-holding a macro lens in a prone position, was the only way I could show how a thorny devil raises its body up off the ground in Australia.

Hand-holding a macro lens in a prone position, shows how a thorny devil raises its body up off the ground in Australia.

Shooting from a low angle may take a bit more time than raising the camera to normal eye-level, but hopefully these few images will show it is well worth the effort for gaining greater impact.

Low Angle Photography for impact

Overlook of Rio Santo Domingo at Las Nubes, Chiapas, Mexico with a 24mm lens

Overlook of Rio Santo Domingo at Las Nubes, Chiapas, Mexico with a 24mm lens

In calm conditions, the turquoise coloured water flows over pale-toned calcareous rocks and around small islands. This changes when the river is in spate as the churning white water surges through the rapids. After gaining elevation for a better view onto a plain or wetland below, the natural instinct is to use a wide-angle lens. Yet, this may not always be the best lens for every landscape. I usually begin by using a wide lens before switching to a longer lens to take portions of the whole vista – what I call a picture within a picture.

A horizontal crop of Rio Santo Domingo at Las Nubes with a 24-120mm lens set at 110mm

A horizontal crop of Rio Santo Domingo at Las Nubes with a 24-120mm lens set at 110mm

 

A vertical crop of Rio Santo Domingo at Las Nubes with a 24-120mm lens set at 120mm

A vertical crop of Rio Santo Domingo at Las Nubes with a 24-120mm lens set at 120mm

From bitter experience, I have found it is always worth taking both horizontal and vertical shots, because you never know the shape of the space a client has to fill.

Finally, using a tripod, I took a series of four horizontal images with the zoom lens at 24mm, each overlapping by at least 25% to combine into a stitched panorama. The final image shows I gained some partially silhouetted foliage in all four corners which provides a natural frame to the panorama.

Stitched panorama from 4 horizontal images of Rio Santo Domingo at Las Nubes, Chiapas, Mexico

Stitched panorama from 4 horizontal images of Rio Santo Domingo at Las Nubes, Chiapas, Mexico

Photoshop actions

File > Automate > Photomerge > Reposition only. (Tick) Blend images together > Select files > Run

Using a wide angle lens for a panoramic sequence may result in a very wide panorama without much depth. Then, shooting in a vertical format will give often give a better proportioned panorama. This exercise is a good one for appreciating how composition works at different scales – with maybe abstract patterns, diagonals or sinuous lines not immediately apparent in a wide shot.

Rio Santo Domingo at Las Nubes, Chiapas, Mexico with a 24mm lens

Rio Santo Domingo at Las Nubes, Chiapas, Mexico with a 24mm lens

View from the footbridge where the river flows through a narrow gorge. Here, a vertical format is the only option worth shooting. (24mm)