English, asked by taetaekim95, 5 months ago

Explain two ways in which undergrowth on a film set may cause a problem for a photographer of wildlife​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
6

Answer:

The name of the game in wildlife photography—whether you’re trying to capture a herd of elephants on the Serengeti Plains or squirrels in your backyard—is patience. Wild animals are going to do what they’re going to do. Unfortunately, you can’t ask them to look this way, do something cute, or stand where the light is better. You have to be there, and ready, when they decide to look cute or do something interesting. Be prepared to wait, and wait, and wait—it takes a long time to get good wildlife shots, even longer to make great ones.

Answered by priyaa2712
3

Answer:

A wild life photographer has a habit of clicking pictures in nature but whereas in films it's more complex because of light management, poses, angles and many other things. And also wild life is a way different than filmy reel life to record in the camera.

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