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Thread: Great horned Owl - environment & portrait

  1. #1
    Anand Kavalapara
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    Default Great horned Owl - environment & portrait

    Took these in April 2009, at Mt. Auburn cemetery, Cambridge MA. Mix of back lit evening sun and shade


    Sigma 500 f/4.5 with Tamron 1.4x on 40D,
    ISO 1250, 1/50 sec, f/6.3 with MLU and remote release.

    Higher iso due to changing light conditions and the TC.

    Second one as a separate post below

    Thanks for your C&C
    Anand
    Last edited by Anand Kavalapara; 12-31-2009 at 01:16 PM.

  2. #2
    Axel Hildebrandt
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    Anand, I removed one of the images because the forum software can't create a thumbnail when more than one image file is in the original post. You could reply to your own thread and post the full image.

    Great find, BTW. I would not sharpen the entire image, just the bird.

  3. #3
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    Hi Anand, the black levels need to come up considerably in post-processing, as "the blacks are not black".

    I did the adjustments on the JPG using ACR, raised blacks and used the fill light slider to keep detail in the darker regions. Also increased saturation a bit, applied an 8% warming photo filter.


  4. #4
    BPN Member Don Lacy's Avatar
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    Hi Anand, Nice find and a very difficult situation to create an image in. I think the image would be stronger if there was more light on the Owl did you use flash?
    Don Lacy
    You don't take a photograph, you make it - Ansel Adams
    There are no rules for good photographs, there are only good photographs - Ansel Adams
    http://www.witnessnature.net/
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  5. #5
    Anand Kavalapara
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    Environment. A closer crop losing the OOF branches would reduce the environment.

    I was on a small hillock facing the owl. so could get the shot at almost eye level.



    Sigma 500 f/4.5 on 40D,
    ISO 400, 1/50 sec, f/4.5 with MLU and remote release.
    Last edited by Anand Kavalapara; 12-31-2009 at 01:20 PM.

  6. #6
    Anand Kavalapara
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    Thanks Axel: I put the second image separately.

    Thanks Dave: Your PP does improve the image.

    Thanks Don: No flash was used. The second image came out brighter as the sun came out and the reflected light was on the owl.

  7. #7
    Publisher Arthur Morris's Avatar
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    Attached Images Attached Images
     
    Dave, Thanks for the reposting efforts. Your certainly had more pop but your last two reposts (this and a Green Heron???) have been a bit on the dark side. Here, you needed to lighten the darkest areas, the face. I did that plus come Eye Borrowing.

    Anand, I much prefer the wider image in Pane #5. In Pane 1 you got yourself in the best spot but the vegetation near the head was impossible to overcome. I like the two open eyes in the Pane 5 image.
    BIRDS AS ART Blog: great info and lessons, lots of images with our legendary BAA educational Captions; we will not sell you junk. 30+ years of long lens experience/e-mail with gear questions.

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  8. #8
    James Yule
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    I think its over sharpened, tough image because of the surroundings.

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