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How to Photograph your Horse

Posted on Tuesday, April 29, 2014 by Heather Dodd

olly and meg
Are you a happy snapper? Or pony paparazzi? Horses are not the easiest of subjects for the amateur photographer to capture. Where should you stand? How can you get them to behave? What’s the best setting and time of year?

Here are nine top tips from equine photographer Sue Westwood-Ruttledge:

•             CLEAN Before you start photographing your horse, make sure you have given it a brush. Wipe its eyes and nose. It’s amazing how much muck and hay shows up in manes and faces. Also clean your head collar and tack. The smallest piece of dirt will show up in photos.

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•             HELP It’s always better if you can have a helper – someone to hold the horse and keep its attention. An alert horse with ears facing forward is far more pleasing to look at than a dozing one. Use your helper to keep the horse’s attention. Horses desensitise very quickly, so get your helper to vary what she is doing to keep them alert.  Walking another horse past always works well, as does having a bucket with feed in.

•             FOCUS Use the eye closest to you as the focal point of your picture. Make sure it is absolutely sharp

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•             HEAD Try to angle the horse’s head to the side rather than have it face straight to camera. It makes a more interesting photo and shows off the horse’s coat and muscles. Head-on shots can sometimes make the horse’s neck disappear and you’ll end up with some very unflattering images.

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•             DETAIL Create interesting, arty shots by going in close for the details. Whiskers, eyes and noses can make for interesting photos.

•             LIGHT On a bright, sunny day, find some shade. It may seem counterintuitive, but sunny days don’t actually make for the best photos. A cloudy but bright day can produce great light for photography.

•             SCENE Look for interesting backgrounds to compliment the horse. Muck heaps and wheelbarrows don’t make for great pictures. Backdrops don’t have to be fields or trees. Old wooden doors, rugged stone walls and corrugated barns – basically anything with texture and colour – will work well. Don’t put a dark coloured pony in front of green trees as it won’t stand out.

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•             MOVE Experiment with where you stand. It’s easier for you to vary your position than to keep moving the horse. Don’t be embarrassed – crouch down, lie on your back, stand up on a box.  Keep moving around your horse looking for interesting angles.

•             CELEBRATE Finally, think about what you’re going to do with your pictures once you’ve taken them. Could they end up on mugs? Calendars? T shirts? A large wall canvas? In a nice album? There are so many options. If you’re proud of your work – and so you should be – it’s a crime to let it languish on your camera.

Experienced equine photographer Sue Westwood-Ruttledge started the Horse Photographer UK www.horsephotographeruk.co.uk franchise in 2013. A horse-owner herself since the age of 14, she carries out over 100 photoshoots of horses and their owners each year. Frequently working her way through a 12-week waiting list, she says the demand for quality equine photography is increasing each year. Franchisees don’t need photography experience, as Sue will mentor them. Just a love of horses.

Tip of the Week: Odd Socks!

Posted on Sunday, September 1, 2013 by Heather Dodd

Here’s a use for any orphan socks you may have lying around the house.  If your horse doesn’t like being sprayed directly with fly repellent, simply pull an old cotton sock (clean preferably!) over your hand and spray it with repellent.  Then wipe your horse over.  We’ve found this a less wasteful method than spraying a sponge, and you’re saving a sock from landfill too, hehehe!

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