Jump to content

Siberian cat


ghiga

Artist: RaL - Raffaella Lunelli - Trento - Italy;
Exposure Date: 2010:09:03 18:44:32;
Copyright: Per ogni uso contattare l'autore - For every use contact the author: raffaellaimage@gmail.com;
Make: Canon;
Model: Canon EOS 50D;
Exposure Time: 1/25.0 seconds s;
FNumber: f/4.5;
ISOSpeedRatings: ISO 320;
ExposureBiasValue: +-1 2/3
Flash: Flash did not fire, compulsory flash mode;
FocalLength: 56.0 mm mm;
Software: Adobe Photoshop CS2 Windows;


From the category:

Animal

· 38,920 images
  • 38,920 images
  • 101,369 image comments


Recommended Comments

This cute is so beautiful.

You have lit this cute in a great manner, you also gained powerful details of the face and remarkable colors.

The composition is all good and could have been more improved if the background left top portion been taken the same red material close and not left with that disturbing dark contrast.

Still the capture is wonderful and very pleasant one, thank you for sharing it and wishing you all of the best.

Link to comment

Ghida, 

This is well composed and lighted - the texture of the cat fur shows well everywhere except just possibly the lower white "bib." I can tell, however, that the cat is not happy by the look on its face. It looks put out with being there. It is on-guard, ready to flee, or fight, if it decides that the stress is too much.  The face looks tense.  Cat pictures look better if the cat is happy.

A secret that works very well in these situations is to get some cat-nip and very lightly spread it under the cloth before you put the cat on it.  The smell of the cat-nip causes the cat to entirely change attitude and become very interested in the situation and location.  Be careful to use very little cat-nip or the cat will begin rolling around on the cloth as though drunk.  Be sure to wash the cat-nip off of your hands or the cat may want to come over and be with you behind the camera.  You can also get a stuffed mouse toy with catnip inside.  Be prepared though to have the cat paying all of its attention to the toy.  If you grow a patch of cat-nip in your garden, you will have all kinds of cats to photograph there.

Happy photographing,

Regards,

Jerry Matchett

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...