#1 gets my vote! You have a nice closeup of the bird's foot/claw in that one and it definitely says craggy to me. Nice job with the DOF and the pano crop.
I say #1, #3 or #4, however I would try a B & W conversion with a little vignetting and see how you feel about that. It may help to draw the eye away from the bright feathers and really hone in on those craggy feet. Nice job with some of the other shots too, just don't speak the theme as loudly.
One day, I started writing, not knowing that I had chained myself for life to a noble but merciless master. When God hands you a gift, he also hands you a whip; and the whip is intended solely for self-flagellation...I'm here alone in my dark madness, all by myself with my deck of cards --- and, of course, the whip God gave me." Truman Capote
OK, I'm new here, so ya might want to take my advice with a grain of salt......but.....
I like #4. I think it shows a nice contrast between "smooth" of the hand and "craggy" of the claws. I agree that the yellow feathers are a bit distracting, so maybe try this.....Instead of B/W, try a Sepia finish. You would actually keep some of the skin tone from the hand, it would mute out the colors of the feathers. I would also see about cropping it a bit more like #1, with more of a panoramic crop taking out some of the top of the photo. Maybe a bit of a vignette?
#1 and #2 say craggy, but really doesn't "tug" at me to like the image much. #3 and #4 in their own small ways show at least a connection/relationship between the hand and the bird, makes it a bit more interesting to me, and out of those two I like #4 better.
Those feet (talons) are sooo familiar. I own a lesser, sulphur crested cockatoo.
The feet belong to my 12 year old Black Headed Caique. When I was getting a parrot, I deliberated a loooong time between a Goffin's cockatoo or a Moluccan. Then I encountered a Caique and was smitten.
"Just because no one understands you doesn't mean you're an artist."
Every shot is so cool and interesting! The focus seems to be on the claws (is that the term for a raptors raptoring appendages?), though in theme I love the orange/yellow, and texture of the leg feathers which makes them all a-ok!
My bad. But believe me if you've ever had a roommate with a Parrot that flies the loft free, and you need sleep, a parrot is a raptor. I threw quarters at it, but it only collected the quarters which my roommate used for lunch.
Thanks for the comments, everyone! I really appreciate them.
I tried a B/W conversion, but... frankly I just don't get black and white... why would one want to strip out amazing color for plain 'ol black and white? Can you tell I'm a color junkie?
Actually, I'm trying to understand the beauty of the color gray and its varied shades, but I'm thick headed.
So, anyway, I'm going with #1.
"Just because no one understands you doesn't mean you're an artist."
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I like #4. I think it shows a nice contrast between "smooth" of the hand and "craggy" of the claws. I agree that the yellow feathers are a bit distracting, so maybe try this.....Instead of B/W, try a Sepia finish. You would actually keep some of the skin tone from the hand, it would mute out the colors of the feathers. I would also see about cropping it a bit more like #1, with more of a panoramic crop taking out some of the top of the photo. Maybe a bit of a vignette?
#1 and #2 say craggy, but really doesn't "tug" at me to like the image much. #3 and #4 in their own small ways show at least a connection/relationship between the hand and the bird, makes it a bit more interesting to me, and out of those two I like #4 better.
Just my $0.02 for what it's worth.
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#1. Definitely.
Those feet (talons) are sooo familiar. I own a lesser, sulphur crested cockatoo.
The feet belong to my 12 year old Black Headed Caique. When I was getting a parrot, I deliberated a loooong time between a Goffin's cockatoo or a Moluccan. Then I encountered a Caique and was smitten.
www.feliciabphotography.com
Parrots have a way of doing that to you.
Jesse
I tried a B/W conversion, but... frankly I just don't get black and white... why would one want to strip out amazing color for plain 'ol black and white?
Actually, I'm trying to understand the beauty of the color gray and its varied shades, but I'm thick headed.
So, anyway, I'm going with #1.
www.feliciabphotography.com