If you were reading along last week, I posted some tips for your cat photography about lighting. I’m not really a photographer. I didn’t even stay in a Holiday Inn Express last night! But I have taken enough photos of my own cats to know some of what works… and I can talk about it on a fairly nontechnical basis to other hobbyists like you.
My remaining tips for your cat photography:
Have your camera handy
Cats sleep 18 hours a day. They also have short attention spans a lot of the time unless food is involved. That means if your camera is put away in a safely locked cabinet inside a difficult-to-open case, by the time you fetch the camera to take a photo, the precious moment you wanted to capture is long gone. Protecting your camera is great unless it keeps you from using it for taking the pictures you want to get!
So get your camera out of storage and have it where you can grab it to take a quick photo when the cute happens. When I’m home on the weekend during the hours where my house has decent natural light, my camera is usually on my desk where it’s easy to access.
This also means anticipating. Before I started to set up my Christmas tree this year, I put my camera on a table in the room where I was assembling the tree. That’s how I caught Pierre shopping through the box of ornaments.
Make magic moments happen
Okay, I’m not going to lie here. My cats are mostly lazy. If Ashton didn’t have to walk from where she sleeps to the food bowl, she probably wouldn’t get any exercise at all if she had anything to say about it. Sometimes I look over the photos I’ve taken recently only to realize “Hey, they’re just sitting around!”
To get your kitties moving, take advantage of the curiosity cats are known for: Grab something unusual and put it in the middle of the floor, and don’t let your cat into the room until you’re ready with the camera. You may only have 30 seconds or a minute, but that first inquisitive exploration of a new thing is golden.
Bonus tip: If you can, put the object somewhere between you and the entrance door. If the kitty enters the room from beyond the new object and approaches it, you’ll be viewing her from the front or side. If your kitty walks past you to see the object, you’re going to be seeing her tail, which probably isn’t the end you prefer to photograph. Newton and Ashton demonstrate:
Get down on their level
A cat’s world is at their eye level. When you take photos of them from your standing height, you tend to look down at them and not see their face or their line of sight, which makes the image less engaging. To enter a cat’s world, try getting down flat on the floor and view the world from their perspective. It’s a lot easier to see your kitty’s face, and even if they aren’t facing you, you may be able to capture the intensity of your kitty’s expression as he focuses elsewhere.
Clear up the background
Since so much cat photography is indoors, what’s in the background of the photo is even more important than in outdoor photos, especially if you don’t have a fancy camera. When you take a photo of a dog — or anyone else — standing in a field and you focus on the subject, pretty much all cameras will consider the stuff on the other end of the field as outside of the focus range, so you get a pleasing, out-of-focus effect for the background.
Inside, walls are closer than a line of trees across a field, so with many cameras, your background doesn’t soften into as much of a pleasing blur. Consider trying to photograph your cat in front of a plain or uncluttered background to avoid it becoming a distraction.
Speaking of distractions, but take a hard look the stuff in the background when you’re photographing your cat. Try to look through a stranger’s eyes. You may not normally pay attention to that pile of towels you set aside to donate to your favorite shelter next week. The person looking at a photo of your cat sitting in front of those towels is going to think “why isn’t that cats climbing Mt. Towelmore?” instead of thinking about how cute your cat is. Keep them focused on the cute!
Less-busy backgrounds in photos aren’t just more appealing to the eye, they’re also a lot easier to manipulate in your photo editing software if you decide to do that later.
Take a lot of photos
I’m always surprised when someone says they took a photo of their cat and it didn’t come out. You took just one photo? Were you worried about how much it was going to cost at the Fotomat to develop it? In our digital age, you can discard photos you don’t like, so don’t be shy about taking plenty. You can always delete them later! A professional photographer wryly called this approach “spray and pray,” but it usually yields my best results. As a non-professional photographer, I can’t be trusted to make a masterpiece on the first shot, and it’s not unusual for me to download 200 photos from a single session with the cats… and keep 5 or 6.
Here’s a screenshot of a folder of unprocessed folders. You can tell from the thumbnails that I take multiple variations of nearly everything!
If you are catching your cat in action, like playing actively with a toy, use the burst mode on your camera to take several photos in rapid succession. Even smartphones are making burst mode available on their cameras. This allows you to to not have to wait for that exact, right instant to snap a photo. Instead, you have a series of freeze-frame photos of the action to choose from.
Hopefully these tips have given you some ideas about things you may not have been doing in your photography that help you capture the photos you want of your kitty.
CC image courtesy usfotografie on flickr
Christy Paws says
Great post! Mom says she tries to do all these. She thinks the hardest one to remember is to clean up the background. She took a bunch of pictures of us under the Christmas tree and later realized there was still a tag hanging from it!
Summer says
My human does most of this. You should see how many outtakes she has that aren’t even interesting enough for me to use in one of my outtake posts!
hilary says
Lucy isn’t pleased by this post – she complains I take too many pictures of her as it is… Well after these awesome ideas she will have so many pictures in her future!
The Island Cats says
Great tips. The mom usually keeps her camera (it’s a point and shoot) or iphone in her pocket so she’ll have it at the ready…much to our dismay.
Melissa & Mudpie says
Those are some great tips that I’m definitely going to put into practice in the new year!!!
Annabelle says
I’m like you I take a lot of photos and that is something that professionals do as well because they know that it’s hard to capture on one try the best composition or angle or reaction they want. Love the photo of the cat in the grass. Terrific!
Lola The Rescued Cat says
These are great tips! Mommy really needed them. One of her biggest problems is background clutter. Oh wait, I’m not supposed to share secrets like that. Oh well…. but that’s why she started using backdrops!
Brian Frum says
That really was a nice bunch of great tips!
Madi says
OMCs mom should have read this earlier, she was finishing up her company is coming cleaning. I did the funniest thing ever just about 1/2 hour ago and her camera was downstairs. She might try to publish a re=enactment of it after Christmas. She said she had no idea I could move that quick or jump that high.
Hugs madi your bfff
Connie says
you had me at Mt. Towelmore
The Florida Furkids says
Mom takes eleventy billion photos of us when she’s trying to get ONE good one MOL Mom remembers Fotomat!
The Florida Furkids
Cathy Keisha says
Great tips only I won’t let TW throw out the bloopers. Between how dark out condo is and the fact that it’s rained steady since October, TW has to use flash. For flash, you don’t want to be at eye level cos that causes laser eyes and washed out eyes. You need to be above them. HAH! Yesterday when TW went to NYC, she went to the “old” neighborhood and noted where Fotomat used to be.
The Swiss Cats says
We’re glad to say that Mum tries to do most of this since she got her new camera two years ago. Purrs
The Daily Pip says
These tips have all been so helpful! I like your tip about de-cluttering the background. Another friend gave me a tip to try photographing Rosie (who is all black) on a solid grey or blue background. I have always tried lighter backgrounds with her. I haven’t tried this tip yet, but plan to this weekend.