7D Mk II, 100-400 Mk II, 1.4TC Mk III, 1/2500, f/8, ISO 1250 crop, basic PP and convert in LR, NR and sharpening in PS. Repost post #5.
Attachment 157334
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7D Mk II, 100-400 Mk II, 1.4TC Mk III, 1/2500, f/8, ISO 1250 crop, basic PP and convert in LR, NR and sharpening in PS. Repost post #5.
Attachment 157334
looks like the eagle was going after the crow, pretty cool! I am always tempted to press the shutter button when I see a scene like this!
I think this image would have been stronger if the crow and eagle were facing each other or at least separated from one another and we could see the crow's heads a bit better. The steep angle wasn't in your favor and the image is underexposed with blacks blocked. Both are a bit too big in the frame but with the roof top as a perch I am not sure what kind of crop is best.
TFS
I agree on the positioning of the birds. Since the crow had just tweaked a tail feather...
I see the crop issue. I will need to add canvas to the top and right side to relieve the cramped look. I brought the exposure down as the whites were about blown out. Very difficult balancing act with blacks and whites in the shot. I will give it a shot to see if I can get a better balance.
Thanks for the thoughts.
Hi John,
the tough balance between whites and blacks comes from the harsh light. with the sun above you, it will be tough to get details in both blacks and whites, had the sun been lower in the sky and behind you, you would have gotten excellent iridescent blacks and creamy whites at the same time. having said that, you could have pushed the exposure here by at least a stop and recovered most whites in RAW conversion.
best
Here is a redo.
Attachment 157338
A difficult one for you John, think you did very well getting the action you got.
Keith.
Hi John,
Crows and rapters! Great to catch some of that action :)
I am not so sure with the main subject being the eagle, if the OOF crow's head in the foreground is optimal.
The extended wings of both birds seem to distract me, perhaps because the dark shadows make me wonder whose wing is whose?
I would consider to bring down the saturation of the sky a tad.
All those minor nits said, I wish I took that photo :)
TFS
Ross
Hi John
An interesting capture! Captured something similar in the Kalahari once- a Black crow was pestering a Yellow Billed Kite in a dead tree for minutes on end- no food involved, just character..( too far to get any postable images..)
The comp is better in RP and so is the detail in blacks, but the whites are a bit cooked- always a problem with both lights and darks in an image. Did you consider double processing?
Yes, f10 might have worked better for the crow, but hind-sight is best sight- or slower SS/ higher ISO depending on shooting mode..
Agree to bring sat down in sky.
It looks like the image was captured on a roof top- if so- where were you to get that interesting POV?:S3:
Hello John,
An interesting action shot and I bet you have a few more from this sequence!
Nice SS and you were quick to capture this interaction between species, it must have only lasted a few seconds...
If this was mine I would tame some of the HL. In terms of crop, another option - often undesirable but maybe worth a try - go square and see what happens:)
I enjoyed viewing this image very much, thank you so much for sharing:w3
Kind regards,
If you have more frames from the same sequence maybe we can move it to the sequence forum and you can write up the story behind the image...I think it works better that way
Thank you Arash for your suggestion, I personally would love to see more from this interaction but did not dare ask:tinysmile_shy_t: I constantly seek support for Story Sequences Forum but it seems the members find it difficult to process three or more images at a time.
A sequence from you John would be very welcome, if you have it:bg3:
Kind regards,
Thank you. I had considered a square crop but did not even look at it. HL have been brought well down as well as white level. I even added a little burn to the brightest spots. I see I have more ideas to examine.
I had a feeling about the action coming as I was able to observe the crows trying to work their way behind the eagle.
I will see what I left from the sequence but I am afraid I have deleted most of it. I will keep in mind the sequence forum. I do have another in mind if I have not decimated the sequence. I tend to thin out my photos taken at the end of the year to the ones I feel are best along with ones that just capture my imagination.
Interesting and unique interaction image.
The repost is a definite improvement. I would still try to sharpen it a little more.
Thank you Karl.
Thank you John for posting a sequence of images from this instance in the Story Sequences Forum, really appreciate it:cheers: