Hand held capure taken from a hide. The image was cropped and I carried out a little background homogenisation.
Model Name : OM-1, Olympus 150-400mmTC
Subject: Jackdaw (Coloeus)
Camera: Canon EOS R3
Lens: EF 300mm F/2.8 IS USM II & 1.4 MKIII HH
Exposure: 1/2500 at f/8 ISO4000
Hand held capture, manual flash cropped slightly.
OM-1 40-150mm & MC 14 (420mm FF equivalent)
ISO 640, 1/800 sec f5.6
Hand held image captured from a hide, small crop.
Model Name : OM-1 OM 150-400TC (561.0mm FF Equivalent)
ISO Sensitivity : 500
This is the last of the Lazuli Buntings I processed from the summer.
That said, I just wanted to say thank you to those who
Hand held manual flash. I'm not usually a fan of dark backgrounds but I felt this looked OK. Image cropped to portraait orientation.
Om01
Hand held and cropped to portrait mode. Finding the beavers was relatively easy, being in the right place to capture a little activity was not quite
Last Post By: Jonathan Ashton Yesterday, 07:13 AMHI folks ... yet another bird on a stick in front of a buttery smooth plain BG , not the hottest stuff on planet earth LOL .
But i do like it .
Canon R6
f/4 400mm DO Mk2 at 800mm
f/8
1/4000
ISO 1250
This is one I captured last week from the shore in my hometown.
Subject: Impala (Aepyceros melampus)
Camera: Canon EOS R3
Lens: RF 100-500mm F/4.5-7.1L IS USM
Exposure: 1/2500 at f/8 ISO1600
Subject: Kestrel (Adult M) Juvenile (F) (Falco tinnunculus)
Camera: Canon EOS R3
Lens: EF 500mm F/4 IS USM II 1.4 MKIII
Exposure: 1/2000
Subject: Kestrel Juvenile (Falco tinnunculus)
Camera: Canon EOS R3
Lens: EF 300mm F/2.8 IS USM II 1.4 MKIII
Exposure: 1/6400 at f/8
It's a bit of a cliche but I felt it had to be done - at the time!
Hand held image captured from a hide in Scotland, cropped (larger than I would
Hand held, cropped, small tidy up on the bird's head, taken from a woodland hide in Scotland.
OM-1 150-400 (@800mm FF equivlent)
ISO 1000
Vareigated Fairy Wren
Thread Starter: Colin DriscollA pair were building a nest at ground level in dense grass, or at least the female was, the male (this bird) strutted around and brought her the occasional
Last Post By: Andreas Liedmann Yesterday, 09:33 AM