Capture the Moment!

Since 2013, I’ve published hundreds of blog posts on all aspects of photography. Some are aimed at helping photographers with their technique, settings, and equipment, but others describe my exhibitions, workshops, and adventures in Africa, Antarctica, and beyond.

Feel free to browse chronologically or click on the category heading above any post for specific content, such as Equipment, Trips or Hints and Tips.

If you’d like to write a guest post, please drop me a line at nick@nickdalephotography.com or on +44 7942 800921.

(Please note that some posts contain affiliate links from which I can earn a small commission.)

Lockdown Ideas
Hints and tips Nick Dale Hints and tips Nick Dale

Lockdown Ideas

Yes, I know that most of you wildlife photographers out there would rather be in the Masai Mara than stuck at home in suburbia, but I thought I’d just make a list of a few things you could do while waiting for lockdown to come to an end…

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Aperture Settings for Wildlife Photography
Hints and tips Nick Dale Hints and tips Nick Dale

Aperture Settings for Wildlife Photography

The aperture is simply the size of the hole in the lens through which light passes on its way to the sensor, and the principle is similar to that of the shutter speed.

The bigger the aperture, the more light reaches the sensor and therefore the brighter the image (all other things being equal). The smaller the aperture, the less light reaches the sensor and therefore the darker the image.

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Shutter Speeds for Action Shots
Hints and tips Nick Dale Hints and tips Nick Dale

Shutter Speeds for Action Shots

Choosing the right shutter speed for action shots is very important: too fast, and the animal will appear frozen; too slow, and you’ll end up with a blurry mess!

Here’s a quick guide to recommended shutter speed settings for different subjects and types of shot together with a few illustrative examples.

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How to Shoot a Leopard
Hints and tips Nick Dale Hints and tips Nick Dale

How to Shoot a Leopard

Leopard sightings are pretty rare, but I went on an Exodus photographic trip to Kicheche Bush Camp in summer 2018 with Paul Goldstein, and that was when I had virtually all my best sightings of leopards.

Here are a few of the lessons I learned from that experience.

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The Slow Pan
Hints and tips Nick Dale Hints and tips Nick Dale

The Slow Pan

I took this shot on an Exodus trip to Kicheche Bush Camp in 2018 with Paul Goldstein.

Paul’s a great fan of the slow pan to heighten the sense of energy in action shots, and I’m now his disciple!

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Depth of Field
Hints and tips Nick Dale Hints and tips Nick Dale

Depth of Field

To blur or not to blur. That is the question.

In this article, I’ll tell you how to control depth of field (or DOF) and try to show you when you don’t want it, when you do want it and what to do when it all goes horribly wrong!

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Selective Colour
Lightroom, Hints and tips Nick Dale Lightroom, Hints and tips Nick Dale

Selective Colour

The advent of digital cameras led to a number of changes in photography, and one of those was the chance to create pictures using selective colour.

The basic idea is to turn a photograph into black and white and then highlight the key area by colouring it in again.

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What I Have in my Camera Bag
Hints and tips, Photography Nick Dale Hints and tips, Photography Nick Dale

What I Have in my Camera Bag

I’ve taken pictures in 26 countries on all seven continents, but the only place I’ve visited regularly is Africa.

This list of what’s in my camera bag is therefore geared towards a safari trip, and it would obviously look a bit different if I was snorkelling in the Galápagos Islands or going white water rafting!

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How to Sharpen an Image
Hints and tips, Lightroom Nick Dale Hints and tips, Lightroom Nick Dale

How to Sharpen an Image

I use Adobe Lightroom for editing all my images, and it’s a very good program, so generally I have no complaints.

However, there’s one thing I never do in Lightroom, and that’s sharpening.

The problem is that ‘sharpening’ in Lightroom is not really sharpening at all. It’s contrast. And there’s a big difference.

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How to use Exposure Compensation
Hints and tips, Photography Nick Dale Hints and tips, Photography Nick Dale

How to use Exposure Compensation

Whenever I teach people about exposure compensation, I always find myself using the example of a leopard in a tree: “The sky behind is bright, but the leopard is dark, so you have to use a stop or two of exposure compensation.”

The idea is to get the ‘right’ exposure for the subject when the camera is being ‘fooled’ by the bright background, but why does this happen?

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