Bird of the evening, the late afternoon, actually
With his Partner. I decided to show the romance between the two, good clean stuff, besides, it is not quite as soft as the hard core stuff, I mean that the camera shake is not as bad.
She saw me and left him. He waited and waited and waited, as did I.
Eventually he went to find his love. I caught up with him at the second tree over. He looks very clear here, I think I know what kind of Hawk he is, but you all can see, too.
His love was a few branches over. I thought you might like a view from the back, for ID purposes.
If one of you had been with me, if anyone had been with me, they might have pointed out that it was 5 PM, and I was shooting at 200 ISO. (I put it on that so my shots for the challenge would be nice and smooth. Who knew that I would be shooting birds again.)
Photography by ginger
Canon 300 with 1.4 extender
ISO 200
After all is said and done, it is the sweet tea.
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Comments
Eric
It's better to be hated for who you are than to be loved for who you're not.
http://photosbyeric.smugmug.com
Very nice pics. The 4th one is sweet. It looks like a Red Tailed Hawk. Great capture.
Harry
http://behret.smugmug.com/ NANPA member
How many photographers does it take to change a light bulb? 50. One to change the bulb, and forty-nine to say, "I could have done that better!"
TML Photography
tmlphoto.com
Moderator of the Technique Forum and Finishing School on Dgrin
Obviously you've got enough light to keep your shutter speed fast enough, but focus just missed or something. But yeah #4 is tack sharp and the bird is perfectly framed by that out of focus stuff above. Perfect!
-matt-
My SmugMug Portfolio • My Astro-Landscape Photo Blog • Dgrin Weddings Forum
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When the birds flew to the other tree I was annoyed, I did not think they were set up as well. I guess I should have thanked the gods above. The light is so much better, I imagine that helped immensely.
I really did not think #1 was soft, or I wouldn't have cropped it that much, or I had others to use, but I will check. I don't use the contrast thing anymore. Might try curves.
Thanks for all the comments, make me think. And didn't someone in another thread mention that light is the important factor. It was here.
ginger
A single photograph can tell an entire story and bring back a multitude of memories.
"Did someone mention that light was important?"
I'd say it was pretty important since that's a big part of what we do. We capture light. I mentioned in another of your threads about trying to see like the camera sees. IMHO, it's all about light (this rule supercedes the "It's all about the food" rule :giggle ). Light is all the camera sees, and in a much smaller range than our eyes. You can shoot the most beautiful subject imaginable and if the light is not right, you probably won't get beautiful results. Conversely, you can shoot the most ordinary subject in extraodinary light and wind up with a masterpiece. It's ALL about the light :
Good work on these Ginger and thanks for sharing,
Steve