our cattle

Help Support CattleToday:

gabbyellepaige

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 5, 2010
Messages
337
Reaction score
0
Location
Texas
So today i gave my heifer a bath and while i waited for the bright lights to set,
i took some pictures around the barn.
These are just some of the show cattle in my FFA chapter.
Some red angus heifers.


IMG_20110628_124448.jpg

IMG_20110628_124359.jpg

IMG_20110628_123909.jpg


All the calves at our barn this year were bulls, three red angus one hereford.


IMG_20110628_124444.jpg

IMG_20110628_124429.jpg


I thought it was cute how the mama hereford was babysitting all the other calves.
IMG_20110628_124419.jpg


Everything else in the barn.
Brahman:
IMG_20110628_123946-1.jpg

Shorthorn:
IMG_20110628_123936.jpg

IMG_20110628_123930.jpg

IMG_20110628_123921.jpg

IMG_20110628_124353.jpg

Limmy:
IMG_20110628_123824.jpg

IMG_20110409_090436.jpg

Charolais:
IMG_20110628_123540.jpg

IMG_20110628_123532.jpg
 
LOL I have seen it before - usually a beginner photographer. Make sure the top of the photo is the same as the horizon. Or there is a button that you can press on a lot of cameras that bring up a graph for you. You can line your photos up with that.

You are also better off taking the photos in landscape than portrait, so don't turn the camera.

With the photos you have you can put them in a program and rotate them one degree at a time. You will have to crop afterwards so will cut out some of what is in your photo but they will be better.

I gave it a try to show you, but it is not possible to keep a lot of content in your photo because of it being taken in portrait instead of landscape.

Hers is the photo rotated.

aaaarotatedsmall.jpg


Here it is rotated and cropped.

aaaarotatedandcroppedsmall-1.jpg
 
Suzie Q":9u65djgv said:
LOL I have seen it before - usually a beginner photographer. Make sure the top of the photo is the same as the horizon. Or there is a button that you can press on a lot of cameras that bring up a graph for you. You can line your photos up with that.

You are also better off taking the photos in landscape than portrait, so don't turn the camera.

With the photos you have you can put them in a program and rotate them one degree at a time. You will have to crop afterwards so will cut out some of what is in your photo but they will be better.

I gave it a try to show you, but it is not possible to keep a lot of content in your photo because of it being taken in portrait instead of landscape.

Hers is the photo rotated.

aaaarotatedsmall.jpg


Here it is rotated and cropped.

aaaarotatedandcroppedsmall-1.jpg
Thank you<3
 

Latest posts

Top