Flash photography at zoo's?

13 years 3 months ago #20739 by Martin
Quick question, do most zoo's allow flash photography? How about tripod?


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13 years 3 months ago - 13 years 3 months ago #20741 by McBeth Photography
Jennifer and I are members of the Portland Zoo in Oregon. We are always flashing and using tripods (especially me). I asked membership services the day we bought the membership 2 years ago and they have not changed since.

Having said that, I wil say that my best work there has been with my low light lens (AF Niikkor 50mm f1.8 ), and its a great place to practice low light (non-flash) photography. Hope this helps!

It is what it is.
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13 years 3 months ago #20742 by Martin

McBeth Photography wrote: Jennifer and I are members of the Portland Zoo in Oregon. We are always flashing and using tripods (especially me). I asked membership services the day we bought the membership 2 years ago and they have not changed since.

Having said that, I wil say that my best work there has been with my low light lens (AF Niikkor 50mm f1.8 ), and its a great place to practice low light (non-flash) photography. Hope this helps!


That does help. Thanks for sharing. BTW, what do they charge per year? I'm sure each zoo will be different, but I'm curious. :beerbang:


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13 years 3 months ago #20750 by McBeth Photography

Martin wrote:

McBeth Photography wrote: Jennifer and I are members of the Portland Zoo in Oregon. We are always flashing and using tripods (especially me). I asked membership services the day we bought the membership 2 years ago and they have not changed since.

Having said that, I wil say that my best work there has been with my low light lens (AF Niikkor 50mm f1.8 ), and its a great place to practice low light (non-flash) photography. Hope this helps!


That does help. Thanks for sharing. BTW, what do they charge per year? I'm sure each zoo will be different, but I'm curious. :beerbang:


$104 per year for two memberships + we are each allowed 1 guest for no charge. A membership also gets us into the Seattle Zoo for free as well as many other Zoos in the US.

It is what it is.
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13 years 3 months ago #20778 by photobod
The only restrictions in the UK are in some of the specialy lit areas such as reptiles and spiders where they are kept in tanks, everywhere else its fine, best asking at the entrance to be on the safe side, I have to agree with McBeth tho, try some low light photography its much better. :goodpost:

www.dcimages.org.uk
"A good photograph is one that communicate a fact, touches the heart, leaves the viewer a changed person for having seen it. It is, in a word, effective." - Irving Penn

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13 years 3 months ago #20793 by crystal
:agree: I have found animals that are inside, behind glass flash photography is not allowed. Usually there are signs that will say no flash photography.
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13 years 3 months ago #20801 by Baydream
One of the unique things about living near Washington, DC is that the National Zoo and the museums of the Smithsonian are free. You can join and receive additional benefits and a wonderful magazine.
www.si.edu/
Photo collections photography.si.edu/
I believe only the art galleries have photo restrictions.

Shoot, learn and share. It will make you a better photographer.
fineartamerica.com/profiles/john-g-schickler.html?tab=artwork

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13 years 3 months ago - 13 years 3 months ago #20834 by Street Shark
Yeah you don't want to tick off a 800lb gorilla with your flash!


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