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by Andy Long
Learn how to get great butterfly images. Find out what camera equipment you will need and the photo techniques used for capturing beautiful butterfly photos in a Butterfly House.
It’s a cold winter day, and you want to get some photography done--but not in the chilly weather outside. What to do? If you live in one of the twenty states with a butterfly house, head there for a couple of hours of interesting shooting. The types of butterflies you’ll find will vary in species, size, and color with the time of year, but you’re certain to have plenty of subjects. While you can capture a great butterfly shot outside during the summer months, chances are, the best shots will still happen at one of these built-in rain forests.
Be ready for a fogged lens when you first enter, but after you get rid of that inconvenience, the fun begins. One way to get your camera ready on the way to one of these warm, humid butterfly zoos is to turn the heat on in your vehicle and put the lenses on the floorboard to warm them up. Putting them in Ziploc bags and then keeping them in there for a little bit when you first arrive in the room can also be helpful. More than likely, they’ll fog at some point, anyway, so bring along a lens cloth to wipe them off from time to time.
If you don’t live near one of the butterfly aviaries in the country, visiting a botanic garden during the summer can also produce good opportunities to create butterfly images. No matter where you go, get there early in the morning, as these beautiful creatures are much less active early in the day before they warm up and begin going from flower to flower to gather nectar. Even then, if you notice one flower that’s getting a lot of activity, you can stay there and wait for the butterflies to come to you.
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Another reason for arriving when the doors to the botanic gardens or butterfly aviary open is you’ll have time alone before the crowds arrive. If you go on a Saturday, expect to share the space with families bringing their young children for a fun outing. They typically don’t show up for about an hour after the facility opens. However, going during a work week doesn’t guarantee you’ll have lots of space, either, because many butterfly aviaries have programs in which the schools in the area bring groups of students throughout the year. Making a simple call to the facility ahead of your visit to find a morning when no tours are scheduled would be best.
Most butterfly aviaries have species from
all over the world. It’s almost like taking a trip to a Costa
Rican rainforest where you would discover more butterfly species
than almost anyplace else. However, because some of your
subjects will be unique species, identifying them can be a
challenge. There are several websites that have identification
information, and you can locate identification books, as well.
An easy shortcut idea is to find a volunteer/employee who is
walking around the facility when you’re shooting, have him tell
you what the different individuals are, and write their names
down.
EQUIPMENT
TECHNIQUES
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Like all wild animals, even among different species, butterflies have a comfort zone as to how close they allow people to be to them. But, if it’s early in the morning and they aren’t fully awake, you can move quite close. (One butterfly permitted me to be only inches away from him, letting me get some tight shots of the detailed patterns on its wings.)
Try shooting lots of different images of these beautiful flyers. Watch for places different ones are landing somewhat frequently, stay there, and let them come to you. Look for interesting flowers they’re using that create a nice color combination, or broad leaves they tend to land on near a window to warm up. You’ll really have to look hard to find some of them, though, as they tend to blend into their environment. A camouflaged shot can make for an interesting composition.
You’ll probably throw away more photos than you keep your first time out, but if you come to enjoy doing this and go back several times a year, you’ll learn the nuances of taking their pictures and end up with more keepers as time goes on. No doubt, if you go one time, you’ll end up wanting to go back again.
WHERE TO FIND BUTTERFLY AVIARIES: There is a website at http://www.butterfly-houses.com/ that lists all of the butterfly aviaries in the country by state. Select your state and see if there’s one near you. If there isn’t an aviary in your area, find one near where you’re going on a trip and try to schedule a visit, as these places offer some great opportunities for photos of butterflies you typically won’t see in the wild in your area.
First Light offers workshops to prime photographic locations in the country. Each year new locations as added as 20-year professional Andy Long travels the country finding great spots. All trips are educational with hands-on help in the field and instructional slide programs. Visit www.firstlighttours.com for more information.
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Photos of these butterflies were taken at the Butterfly Pavilion in Westminster, Colorado. They offer regular early morning (7:45-9am) photography quiet times on the 3rd Tuesday of each month and you can schedule before or after hours sessions for groups of 6 or more.
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