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Photographing the Camargue: How to capture the soul of the white horses

16/07/2026 | 520 reads
Photographing the Camargue: How to capture the soul of the white horses
At the edge of salt pans and lagoons, the Camargue horse is more than a subject, it is a presence. This guide brings practical tips and local stories to help you photograph these white horses with respect and artistry.

🚀 Key Takeaways

  • Core concept: Expose for highlights, frame for light and motion.
  • Practical tip: Shoot at golden hour, use +1 exposure compensation and spot metering.
  • Did you know: Foals are born dark and slowly turn the familiar white.

Pure white under a low sun, the horse becomes a living sculpture. Imagine a small herd running through shallow water on the Vaccarès lagoon at sunset, spray flying, pink flamingos like confetti in the background.

Light and white

White is deceptive. A coat that reads as white to the eye will fool a camera into underexposing. The practical rule is simple: save the highlights, then recover shadows in RAW.

Use spot or center-weighted metering on the brightest part of the horse, and set exposure compensation to +1 or +2 EV if necessary. Check the histogram, not the preview, to avoid clipped whites.

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Golden hour, the hour after sunrise and before sunset, gives warm rim light and separates the horse from reed and sky. Backlighting creates a halo on the mane, while overcast light can reveal texture without burning highlights.

Faces and gestures

The subjects are both horses and the people who care for them: gardians, manadiers, and their herds. Folco de Baroncelli (1869-1943) helped shape Camargue identity and the rituals that still provide photographic stories today.

Look for small gestures: the gardian’s hand on the horse’s neck, a foal nudging its mother, a sudden look toward the wind. These moments tell more than a posed portrait.

Familiar places to meet manades include the marshes around Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer and the plains near Arles. Always ask permission before approaching a herd. A smiling gardian can point you to the best light and the most photogenic animals.

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Technique and secrets

Equipment matters, but choice is pragmatic. A 70-200 mm gives reach without startling animals. For wide environmental shots, use 24-70 mm. Shoot RAW, enable continuous AF and burst mode for action.

To freeze a gallop, aim for 1/1000 s or faster. For a dynamic blur, try panning at 1/125 to 1/250 s, following the horse and using a tele lens. Use ISO only as needed; in golden hour 100–800 ISO is typical on modern cameras.

Respect the landscape. Avoid trampling reed beds, stay on tracks, and do not chase a herd for a shot. The best images often come from patience, a low angle, and a willingness to return at different hours and tides.