Magee Marsh is one of several prime birding spots along the southern shore of Lake Erie east of Toledo, Ohio. In the middle of May, it's a stopover for warblers migrating across the lake. Based on personal accounts from folks who've been there, then, the number of warblers may be exceeded only by the number of birders and photographers. The shots for this image were taken near the end of last March. I found out, later, that migrating Tundra Swans begin arriving in late March and stay through April, but I must've gotten there before they did. I also learned, after putting the Canada Geese in the image, that the marsh was one of the original sites for reintroducing them into Ohio in the 1960s. (For some reason, this shows up here darker than it's meant to be. Maybe because of the low quality setting required??? I might try reposting at a smaller size and higher quality to see if that helps.)
Nikon D3S, ISO 400, f/22, seven-exposure HDR at 1 EV increments, zoom lens at 17mm
processing highlights
- flipped horizontally and cropped a small amount from the top for composition
- The actual clouds were low but not this heavy. The basis for this sky is a Photomorphis texture.
- Topaz Simplify -- saved watercolor preset, partially masked
- Alien Skin Snap Art -- saved watercolor wash preset, Hard Light blend mode, 33% opacity
- The geese started with a brush from sd-stock at DeviantArt. They were done in two slightly offset layers. The first was white; the second brown. Black was added with a saved Topaz Simplify edges preset.
- Photo Filter adjustment layer -- Warming 85, masked to vegetation and geese
- two masked Belle Fleur textures -- one on two layers at Hue and Overlay for the sky, one at Hard Light for the vegetation
- Fractalius -- three saved black & white presets; two at Multiply, one at Divide
- Snap Art -- saved black & white Line Art preset, masked, Multiply and Divide
- Simplify -- saved black & white edges preset, masked, Multiply and Divide
- gradient vignette







I'm not sure it suffers from being dark - gloomy weather would look dark. There is a pinkish cast in the very center of the vegetation and also on the upper left vegetation that doesn't quite feel right. From the textures? And the interesting thing is that when I look, it will be there one minute and gone the next. Maybe I need to have my eyes checked!


