These birds are verry rare in Holland so beeing able to make a portret is derfore a verry special moment.
Olympus E3, Zuiko ED300 F2.8, zuiko 2.0 converter, 600mm focuslength, 1/80 sec, F7.1, ISO400, +1 stop
These birds are verry rare in Holland so beeing able to make a portret is derfore a verry special moment.
Olympus E3, Zuiko ED300 F2.8, zuiko 2.0 converter, 600mm focuslength, 1/80 sec, F7.1, ISO400, +1 stop
I would love to have seen the light evenly on that beautiful face. It is a good portrait regardless and love to see the sun in at least its left eye. Did you not already post this here?
Thanks for sharing.
Oeps...yes indeed. I have posted this one before......can I delete it?
If you ask a moderator, I am sure they can for you. :) Still love seeing it though!
Alexander, I will delete if you want to, but I think it is good that I don't mind seeing it again and this way it will reach some members that didn't see it in the first round.
Excellent detail and EXP. He seems to be looking at a point higher than you or this may be an optical illusion given the horizon's reflection in the eyes.
Very well done, congratulations!
Hello Alex,
This is a wonderful image and worth seeing again. I love to see tight portraits such as this and the detail and the lighting are superb. I myself have gotten quite close as you have here but never with the wonderful results and the good lighting conditions such as this. The short-ears are all gone here on Vancouver Island now until next Winter when we get them for about four months. Even with 600mm equivalent you must have been quite close to get such detail. Good work!
All the best,
Steve Large
Hey Alex......I thought I'd seen that owl before. Don't worry.......it's a beauty and I love it just as much as before. They are so interesting....with a surprised look on their face. Wonderful sharpness in the eyes and face while showing the smoothness of the breast. Wonderful light....and I wish it was mine.
Pretty darn nice portrait Alexander. One thing no one mentioned is the slightly tilted face (one eye is slightly higher than the other) and needs a slight CCW rotation. It may not be noticeble much, but I would still use the ruler tool to draw a line connecting the center of each pupil then use Image>Rotate canvas>Arbitrary. Overall very well done!! :-)
Daniel:
Your comment about leveling the face is an interesting one. In human portraits, you often want a bit of face turn, or head tilt, not dead level and straight ahead. I wonder how that aesthetic translates to bird portraits?
Just a thought in response to your comment.
Cheers
Randy
Randy, for human portraits I agree about a face turn but I'm not too keen on head tilts (those "tilted" head portraits seem too "staged" IMO, for sure personal preference and others may disagree). I like owls looking straight on, their eyes are so riveting and make squared to the sensor plane stares often quite powerful. I feel like I am in a staring contest with this guy and level eyes would make it seem stronger - if you've done staring contests for fun you'll notice that you are pretty much staring straight ahead and level against your "competitor". Hope I make sense? :-)
I think this is a brilliant image, and of course those eyes just make this pop. Excellent detail captured on the head, and cant help but would like to see this larger.
Hi Alexander!
I am actually looking at the reflection in the owl's eyes ... and wonder if Daniel can comment on the reflected horizon that I see. If the horizon was water, then I would think that should be used as "level". However if the reflected horizon was a hill or slope ... then disregard.