This easy-to-use and easy-to-understand guide teaches you how to bypass technical considerations and learn to see horses in a new light, fine-tuning your observation skills to recognize photo
opportunities, and discovering how to take best advantage of them.
Regardless of whether you use a film, digital, or video camera to shoot conformation, action, or art photos, you''ll benefit from chapters on choosing and controlling the background, working
with natural light, communicating with the horse''s handler, and looking at the entire scene from the horse''s perspective. You''ll learn to circumvent common problems such as distortion (for
example, when the horse''s head looks larger than its hindquarters), distracting background objects, camera shake, sun flare, and the "spaghetti approach" (the naive notion that taking lots
of random pictures will result in a good one).
Groves shows how to take portraits of people and horses together, and includes tips for taking your camera on the trail. With regard to action shots, you''ll learn how to adjust the shutter
speed and anticipate the action in such specific events as jumping, reining, rail classes (Western pleasure, hunter hack), roping, barrel racing, team penning, and dressage.
Since videos have become not only home movies but selling tools, a section is devoted to creating persuasive "moving" pictures.