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Anyone Can Be a Horse Photographer

By: Jeffery Hudson

Getting a horse to pose is impossibility for most people. Only one lady equestrian photographer from Pasadena, California, can do the impossible, and her photos find their way to the homes of many celebrities. She started out with a camera borrowed from Pasadena City College, and after graduation her motor home office has followed tracks and shows in many places, giving her the chance to photograph the Olympics in Montreal and British Princess Anne.

It was only practical that she should practice photography on horses for her PCC photography classes, which she took after graduating from Pasadena High School. Since 10 years of age, she had been living close to Eaton Canyon Riding Stables. She did her homework every weekend at the stables with her borrowed camera. Her first photo sold, and she was on her way to a full-blown career, giving up music, art and journalism.

Two renowned photographers took her on as an apprentice at a Santa Barbara show, after which she helped them pose and focus horses at shows, tracks, and state fairs all over the country. Second, she hooked up with another photographer pair, who stayed the California circuit. Her mother takes care of business nowadays, while she shoots using her Swedish camera with German lens.

She is known for exciting shots, from clearing six-foot hurdles to nosing a win. But for the lady with the camera horses also sit on all 4 hoofs for formal portraits. Some horses even show their pleasure with being photographed. Horses who enjoy being photographed help the photographer by perking their ears or raising their heads. With other horses, you cannot expect any help at all.

She said that there's more to taking a fine horse photo than meets the eye. The hunters and jumpers are best captured mid-air with legs folded just so. The usual shot of Tennessee walkers is with their front hoofs in action and an over reaching hoof with their hind legs. A stock horse should be caught stopping in a slide, and a saddle horse should be caught with legs and head held high. Some of her acclaimed works are of the Peruvian Paso, an endangered South American species that groups are scrambling to have multiplied. Their best angle is with their forelegs rolled toward the outside. Their value increases with the white ponchos and elaborate gear sported by their riders.

Because of her work, she has come in contact with many celebrity horse lovers. She has even made it to royal circles. At the Montreal Olympics she was able to photograph Princess Anne, which brought her to the side of the Queen. The Queen admitted her anxiety over watching her daughter take the high jump. Even though she spends her free time swimming, back packing, bicycling, panning for gold and sometimes even riding a horse, she felt she needed to switch up her horse photographs with fork lift pictures.

The photographer does not have to wait for the fork lift to perk its ears.

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A horse can jog in his sleep, but can he pose? The only person in the world who can do the impossible is a lady photographer from Pasadena, California, whose photos are hung in the homes of famous people.

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