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Another option for bloody mouths and arrow/bullet wounds is simply shoot Black & White or save a B&W version out of Photoshop or any other basic photo editor. Black & White images are often more interesting. I recently took home a ribbon at the Pope and Young Club Biennium Convention in Texas with a B&W photo of my daughter with my turkey. Oh, and I took the photo with my cell phone
Good suggestions. Another rule of thumb is to try to either be completely in the sun or completely in the shade, this will help in editing should your image be blown or too dark. Also try to keep from shooting into the sun.
Tip 11: shoot upward from a low angle. You want to see sky or distant backgrounds, not the ground behind the hunter. Many of my best photos of others were taken from ground level.
Quote from: huntnphool on July 06, 2012, 02:45:35 PMGood suggestions. Another rule of thumb is to try to either be completely in the sun or completely in the shade, this will help in editing should your image be blown or too dark. Also try to keep from shooting into the sun. Tip #12If there is still sharp daylight/shadow contrast in the faces, use fill flash. If the flash is too strong for your tastes (ie it washes out colors or skin tones) use Flash Exposure Compensation in the settings menu to dial down the flash intensity.
You want to see sky or distant backgrounds