Recreation

“Shoot” the Landscape

Oct 17, 2025 | Hall and Hall
“Shoot” the Landscape

What entails a great photography shoot?

  • Quality Subject Matter
  • Saturated Light
  • Quality Wide-Angle Lens High-Res Body
  • Sturdy Tripod
  • And most importantly, some Luck!

 

How to get from Photo One to Photo Two?
black angus cows and calves in front of cloud-covered sunset
black angus cows and calves in front of cloud-covered sunset

The Necessities

A Quality Lens

Canon L Series or RF Series in a 16-35

A general rule of thumb: shutter times less than 1/160th of a second should be on a tripod

Smart tip: use the delayed timer set at 2 seconds to avoid camera movement

Filter, Filter, Filter! A polarizer for skies, clouds, and rainbows. Try neutral density for mid-day light to blur moving water.

Camera Settings

Aim to learn how to shoot in full manual for the best results. Semi-manual settings such as Time Value (TV), Aperture Value (AV), etc. will still result in good photography

F-Stop is a lens diameter control influencing the depth of field by how much light enters the camera

i.e. Aperture setting at 1.8 is best used to bring sharp focus on a single object such as a flower while blurring the background (bokeh)

Landscape shot – utilize the mid-range settings from f-8 to f-16 on a tripod, for free-wheeling hand-held, utilize the lower range of settings

 

Composition

Long vistas can get boring quickly without interesting foreground, look for flowers, wildlife, quaint cabins, humans – they’ll all add depth

Rise Early and Embrace Dusk – the warmest light saturation is most often best when the sun is low, coincidentally, this is also the best time to see wildlife

Aim for days which include big fluffy white clouds, avoiding total overcast and cloudless flat skies

Pro tip: Plan to shoot on days when the forecast calls for precipitation. When you get lucky, the skies break and illuminate the cloud underbelly

“You can’t shoot rainbows on sunny days.” ~Craig Hergert

 

 

Don’t miss out and skip editing your photos. One sure way to discover how to take the best images is by editing them. Incredible tools and technology exist in programs like Lightroom and Photoshop. Lightroom allows an editor to isolate skies and balance the light as well as filter clouds to give them “pop.”

Pro tip: Shoot multiple shots which in addition to the more advanced photo stacking, you can play with adjustments to find the right light balance. It is very difficult to bring extreme light out of an image but it is possible to bring shadows or darker images up to create a balanced image.

Practice shooting 2-4 stops down in shutter speed (one reason for shooting in manual mode). Take multiple shots of the same subject at different stops to see what produces the best image. Practice the same with your aperture.

Spend enough time outdoors, shooting and creatively trying new techniques and editing, and your eye will naturally draw towards subject matter with interesting surroundings. Best of all, you’ll see light and nature at the best time of day.

~Courtesy of Tim Murphy