Ya gotta love Spring! Canon T3i, Tamron 150 - 600mm, 600 mm, 1/1250, f/6.3, ISO 800, handheld
Ya gotta love Spring! Canon T3i, Tamron 150 - 600mm, 600 mm, 1/1250, f/6.3, ISO 800, handheld
Very nice -- sharp and well-exposed for the bird. The whites are a little hot -- not really blown but I wonder if there is a little more detail to be pulled out of them?
The pink in the blossoms is perfect for the bird. You might experiment with some crop on the left to move the bird away from the center if you don't object to squarish crops.
Hi Warren! Cardinal exposure is one of the best I've seen! What Diane said about whites and crop. Image sings Spring!
www.mibirdingnetwork.com .... A place for bird and nature lovers in the Great Lakes area.
By the way, here is the uncropped Raw in case anyone wants to demonstrate how they feel it might be cropped differently, I might just not be seeing how it might improve the image. Being here to learn I'd like to see others take on this one.
Thanks!
Good on the flowers, artist's choice on the crop! You might want to clone out the 4 unattached pieces floating into the frame on the left edge.
Yes, that was it. (And now I see one on the lower right edge -- just a small white OOF area.) Border patrol can really help keep attention on a subject.
Here's the crop I had in mind -- just a possibility -- rarely any right or wrong here. Just a way to move the subject out of the center, which can often create a more dynamic image, but doesn't always work. But that's quite a bit of a crop from the original. With a wild bird getting close enough is a real challenge. (Sort of like a very small DSO*, which is my current frustration.)
*For those who don't know the shorthand of astronomy, that's a deep sky object: an itty-bitty but very pretty thing that you'd give your eye teeth to fill a frame with. Sort of like birds...
Really like the reposts and the way you exposed the reds, can be difficult. this says spring!
Beautiful image and I like the detail in the feathers and the head position. The green background is smooth and distraction free. Did you try a vertical crop? Very appealing and artistic image.
steve
Thanks Steve! I have not tried a vertical crop yet, Diane's is a square crop, I'll have to take a look at it since i have so much FOV to play with, thanks for the suggestion. Here is a vertical crop and I incorporated Diane's suggestion of moving the Cardinal to the left of the frame. I like this one too!
Last edited by Warren Spreng; 04-22-2015 at 07:39 PM.
Yes, I think this one emphasizes the bird best.
I love it with the new crop, this is a really lovely image. Excellent!
Thanks Steve!
Love the image and really like the latest crop. Wonderful capture in a beautiful setting.
Thanks Alison!
Hi Warren, one thing I would suggest is always be aware of heavy, or substantial crops. Your IQ will drop and therefore if you then print, or have the image printed it may not look as good? When shooting try to frame 'in camera' with some room for movement at PP stage for that final crop. Your images and IQ will be substantially better and overall you won't be bashing the **** out of those pixels.
Cheers
Steve
Thanks to everyone for input into this. A nice exercise in many thoughts working together. I, too, like the tighter crop. Makes the bird the main ingredient. Nice work.
Great work and discussion on the RP's Warren and everyone! Appreciate learning from all of you!
www.mibirdingnetwork.com .... A place for bird and nature lovers in the Great Lakes area.
Thanks Sandy!