Thanks Joel! I agree with you, I only had the 500mm with me, and in FL, 500mm sometimes is too long!
here are couple of more of that egret
thanks for viewing!
We had a rain storm this afternoon when I got home from work, this Red Bellied Woodpecker came to my setup shortly after it stopped.
1DMKIV
700mm
ISO 1000
f/5.6
1/250
580EXII at 1/128 power + better beamer
JJ, Great shots of the Egrets-----Must be nice when the 500 is "too much lens"
Joel, more cool shots as usual---is the latest a BlueJay? I really like that one.
Here is one of a Says Phoebe----I decided to play a little with PS--Can you Tell
One question---Does this look over sharpened?
Last edited by bob williams; 05-30-2012 at 04:34 AM. Reason: Spelling?
Bob
thanks Joel and Bob for your compliment!
[QUOTE=
You could add some canvas in photoshop on that first one but it would take some time to make it look right because of all the branches.[/QUOTE]
Joel, I really don't have any idea what the canvas in PS is, maybe you can explain it a little?
and Bob, I would say your picture is a little over on my screen.
Bob it does look a tad, but did you make the background gray from a green one? The only reason I asked is you can see some bleeding from the green into the feathers of the bird in a couple spots. If your using CS5, refine the edge about 15 points then decomntaminate the layer (this takes away color bleed from green screens). I think you'd be good.
Using the crop tool you can extend the size of your image and then use "content aware" to fill in the added space
http://www.natcoll.ac.nz/blog/photos...t-aware-scale/
First time photographing birds with my 55mm macro! Not the most handsome devil I've ever seen. :P
Here is the 100% crop:
Can some of you birders explain to me why this guy let me get so close before he flew away?
This was at f/5.6 and ISO 2500 (probably more like ISO 5000 after white balancing). I think I should have bumped the ISO even higher and stopped down more. What do you think?