This is the second of five posts about shooting and editing wildlife photos for different creative results on safari. We’ll look at high-key, low-key, black-and-white, backlit, silhouette, and blue hour. Each style offers a unique way to see and a different set of choices, both when you’re out in the field and when you’re editing. While I’m focusing on a South African safari, these ideas work anywhere you’re photographing wild animals.
I use Canon equipment for all my photos, but I’ve tried to avoid using brand-specific terms wherever possible. My main post-processing tools are Lightroom Classic and Photoshop, and my guide starts from there, but I kept the details general, and they would apply to most post-processing software.
Today, we’ll continue with the low-key style.

My best low-key photo almost didn’t happen. We had been watching a male baboon for nearly half an hour. The light was nice, our spot was good, and the baboon was relaxed, in the way that animals are when they have absolutely no interest in you. Then the light shifted. The soft golden-hour glow faded as clouds moved in from the west. The guide turned on the engine.
I asked him to wait.
The sun slipped below the clouds and sent a beam of low light across the baboon’s face. Everything behind him, the trees, the bushes, the late afternoon shadows, turned almost black. Only the baboon was lit. I kept taking photos until the light disappeared. That evening, only the shots from those last ten minutes were worth keeping.
That’s what low-key photography is about. It’s not just darkness for its own sake, but using darkness as a tool to highlight what matters and let the rest fade away.
What Low-Key Actually Is
Low-key is the opposite of high-key. It relies on dark tones and deep shadows. The subject stands out from almost black surroundings, shaped by careful lighting. High-key images are bright and airy, while low-key images limit the light so only what you want is visible.
But in wildlife photography, you can’t control everything. You can’t move a lion or change the direction of the light. What you can do is notice when the right conditions appear and be ready to capture them.
The key is tonal separation. The subject needs to be noticeably brighter than the background. If both are lit the same way, the image looks flat, not low-key. The drama in low-key photos comes from the contrast between the lit subject and the dark surroundings.
The Conditions to Look For
On safari, low-key lighting often happens naturally. To spot good opportunities, watch for these situations:
Golden hour with a dark background. The low sun, just after sunrise or before sunset, gives strong, directional light. If an animal is lit from the front or at an angle and the background is in shade, like a dark tree line, thick bush, or riverbank shadow, the scene already has the tonal separation you need. You’re not making the image, just noticing it.
Dappled light under trees. When an animal sits under a tree and light filters through the branches, you get a natural, low-key effect. The bright spots light up the animal in places, while the shadows around it do the rest.
Storm light. A dark, cloudy sky can create amazing low-key conditions. When a gap in the clouds lets light hit your subject, the rest of the scene stays in deep shadow. These moments are short and unpredictable, which makes them special. The drama is already there; you just need to be ready.
All these situations have one thing in common: the light seems purposeful. It doesn’t light up everything evenly, but instead highlights only certain parts.
In the Field

For low-key shots, I use Manual mode. The strong contrast in these scenes makes auto metering unreliable. The camera sees the dark background and tries to brighten everything, which you don’t want. Manual mode gives you full control.
Spot-meter on the lit area of the subject: the highlighted shoulder, the lit side of the face. Using spot metering measures exposure from a single point in the frame, which helps ensure the animal itself is correctly exposed, even if the rest of the scene falls into shadow. Don’t worry about the background; let it go dark.
Turn off Auto Lighting Optimizer or any similar shadow-brightening feature on your camera. If it’s on, it will try to brighten shadows and ruin the low-key effect before you even start editing. Also, turn off Highlight Tone Priority.
Use negative Exposure compensation. I shoot manual, but my Canon R5M2 lets me dial in exposure compensation in Flexible Priority (Fv) mode. Lowering it by one or two stops works well. This makes the image darker, so the subject’s lit areas look right while the background gets darker.
When an animal starts moving quickly, I switch to a higher shutter speed, usually 1/1.000 second or faster, to freeze motion and avoid blur. I also raise the ISO as needed to keep the image exposed properly without letting the shadows get murky.
Continuous autofocus (AI Servo/AF-C) helps keep a moving subject sharp, while burst mode (I use Canon’s Drive Mode High-speed continuous shooting +) increases the chance of capturing the perfect moment when the light and pose come together.
If the animal moves into deeper shade or the light changes suddenly, be ready to adjust your exposure compensation or spot-meter on the brightest part of the subject again. Reacting to movement is as much about anticipation as it is about camera settings; follow the animal with your lens and keep your finger half-pressed on the shutter, so you’re ready as soon as light hits.
For the Histogram, think the opposite of high-key. Most of the tones should be on the left, with many dark areas. There should be a smaller peak on the right for the lit parts of your subject. Make sure this peak doesn’t touch the edge of the histogram; if it does, you’ll lose detail in the highlights.
Animal Detection autofocus can help, but it works best in good light rather than in deep shadows. If your camera struggles to focus, switch to Spot autofocus and place it on the lit part of the animal. In very low light, the bright edge usually gives the best contrast for focusing.
Always shoot in RAW for low-key photos. This is essential. You need the flexibility to manage shadows, recover highlights, and adjust tones, which you just can’t do well with JPEGs. For camera settings, I typically start with an aperture around f/5.6 to f/6.3 to keep a nice balance between depth of field and subject sharpness. ISO often sits between 800 and 3.200, depending on how dark the scene is and how much light I have on my subject. These settings give me a good base for most low-key wildlife shots, but I always adjust as needed based on the light and the animal’s behavior.
Post-Processing
Editing low-key images is the opposite of editing high-key ones, but it needs more care. You’re not just flipping the high-key process. Instead, you shape the darkness, making it deeper in some spots, keeping texture in others, and managing how light fades into shadow. This makes the image dramatic, not just dark.
I do most of my initial editing in Adobe Lightroom Classic, so all of the steps here refer to Lightroom’s panels and tools.
Start in the Basic panel. Lower the Shadows slider by forty to eighty, depending on your image. Lower the Blacks by the same amount. Raise Contrast by twenty to forty points. Add a bit of Clarity. Low-key photos look better with more mid-tone contrast, which makes the subject stand out. Use the Tone Curve too: add a point in the shadow area and pull it down a little. This deepens the shadows without changing the highlights, giving your image its signature depth.
Most of the editing happens during masking. In Lightroom, click the masking tool (the circle-and-dash icon), then choose ‘Select Subject.’ Lightroom will automatically highlight the main subject, usually the animal, with a red overlay. With the subject selected, raise the shadows a bit, just enough to keep some texture where light meets dark. Next, click ‘Invert’ in the mask panel; now the mask affects everything except the animal. Adjust the background by lowering the Exposure and setting Blacks to minus 60 or lower. The background should be almost pure black. If you see any mid-tone gray, keep adjusting until it’s gone.

Pay close attention: what separates a low-key photo from a plain dark one is intentional lighting. The lit parts of your subject should look truly illuminated, not just less dark than the rest.
For detailed edge work, after darkening, use a Luminance Range mask on the brightest areas. Raise the Whites and Highlights a bit. This keeps the feeling that the light is intentional.
A rim-lit mane against a dark background, use Photoshop’s Dodge and Burn tools on a 50% grey Overlay layer. The Burn tool deepens shadow edges, while the Dodge tool brightens highlights. Use low opacity and build up the effect slowly. This looks much more natural than making big changes all at once.
Low-key photography asks you to do something that feels a bit uncomfortable: trust the darkness. When you look at your photos on a small screen in the field, you might want to increase the exposure. For low-key shots, that’s the wrong move. The darkness isn’t a problem; it’s what makes the image.
That difference, seeing darkness as intention, not a problem, is what separates an underexposed photo from a true low-key shot. The baboon in those last ten minutes wasn’t badly lit. He was lit perfectly for the image.
Related Posts
- How To Shoot and Edit High-Key Wildlife Photos
- A Great Photograph
- How To See the World Like an Artist
- It Is an Illusion That Photos Are Made With the Camera
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