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Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
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Albino Love <3
I want one so badly maybe next bigish snake will be the SD an a boa can wait lol
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Re: Albino Love <3
I'd take any one of those snakes off your hands for you...;)
Sent from my ADR6410LVW using Tapatalk 2
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Albino Love <3
I'll take that for the compliment ;) can't say my hands aren't full though!
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they're all hot. especially those boas. and that purple retic is so PURPLE. lol do they usually keep their purple as they get older or does it get lighter or darker? and that first pic of your white albino, is that in a light tent? and if so, how did you manage that? lol when i had my light tent out for picture day, my retic wasn't goin. lol
http://imageshack.us/a/img826/3364/img0690y.jpg
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Albino Love <3
The thing with retics is they get massively better with age!! So colors get brighter and better unlike balls that look insane as hatchlings and fade out.
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Albino Love <3
Also these were done on a tub lid using diffused high power flash. I will upload a shot of the setup used this weekend
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I also love albinos !!
I have 9 snakes altogether and they include 6 albinos !
I have an Hypo Amel stripe Corn snake , a HC Albino Royal Python , a T+ Lavender Albino Florida Kingsnake ( Ruby eyed ) , a SunGlow Albino Boa , an Avalanche Corn and my latest baby ..... an Albino Imperial King Hybrid - Cali King x Pueblan Milk snake!
Check out the Imperial Hybrid !
http://i39.photobucket.com/albums/e1...pseacac121.jpg
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That is a nice looking albino!
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Re: Albino Love <3
Quote:
Originally Posted by creepin
they're all hot. especially those boas. and that purple retic is so PURPLE. lol do they usually keep their purple as they get older or does it get lighter or darker? and that first pic of your white albino, is that in a light tent? and if so, how did you manage that? lol when i had my light tent out for picture day, my retic wasn't goin. lol
http://imageshack.us/a/img826/3364/img0690y.jpg
Ok - here's my set up for retics as promised. I will say that retics are one of the harder species to photograph simply because of their size. But for most things up to 7 ft I have used this tactic to get a clean shot without much effort once its all set up.
http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8531/8...ddb664af_c.jpg
Using a large tub (my holding and transporting tubs) line the bottom with clean paper towels, 2-3 layers should produce a thick enough white layer. Make sure the paper towels are NOT patterned or colored. The less "padding" on them the better.
http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8516/8...f7918e23_c.jpg
Place a tight fitting hide over the paper towels and let the snake get settled under the hide. Let them sit there for a few minutes, most retics will calm under the hide and coil up nicely for you. Once enough time has passed you can pull the hide off revealing your properly positioned snake.
http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8517/8...6243bdf8_c.jpg
After you pull the hide off, move slowly so your snake does not become nervous. Get in position and have your camera PRE focused on the paper towels. As long as you are using a DSLR this should not be a problem. You will need to use your pop up flash if that is all you have, for me I use a mounted side flash with and without a diffuser. Todays setup was without a diffuser because I needed more direct and powerful light. Worked well!
http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8520/8...73d2331f_c.jpg
The set up I use . . . Canon 5D MK II. Canon 100mm F2.8 USM Macro lens. Arcaswiss Monoball Z1 ball head mounted on a Gitzo 3541 Carbon Fiber tripod. Wimberley Sidekick gimbal and T40 plate attached to lens collar with Wimberley flash bracket attached to the T40 lens plate with a Canon 580 EX II mounted remotely via Vello Sync cable. This is overkill, but I have this equipment for my wildlife photography, so all I needed to pick up to make all this work was a Macro lens and use my existing setup (tripod, cables, releases, and flash setup.
http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8380/8...4fd63e83_c.jpg
Your end result. Minimal post processing applied - White Balance correction, contrast corrected slightly, minor crop (less than 5%), water mark and post process sharpening. Camera settings were as follows:
Shutter Speed: 1/100
F-stop: f/11
ISO: 100
Focal Length 100mm
Flash EB +1 1/3 stop
Mode: Manual
There are many ways to get this result, including using no flash but lights on a light box, this is just the way that I do it for my website images, and stock photography. I'll probably completely replace this background on the above image to make a nice composite shot for my website later on.
Hope this helps, feel free to ask any follow up questions and I'll get back to them!
Cheers
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