May 24, 2013, 09:37:27 AM

Author Topic: Show your Bird Portraits  (Read 155469 times)

Renegade Runner

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Re: Show your Bird Portraits
« Reply #615 on: December 20, 2012, 09:22:45 PM »
Canada Goose

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Re: Show your Bird Portraits
« Reply #615 on: December 20, 2012, 09:22:45 PM »

Jackson_Bill

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Re: Show your Bird Portraits
« Reply #616 on: December 20, 2012, 09:25:00 PM »
trumpeter swan
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Renegade Runner

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Re: Show your Bird Portraits
« Reply #617 on: December 20, 2012, 09:25:44 PM »
Cattle Egret

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Cool image... He seems to be very intense... Too bad so dark out at that time or heavy shade, sunlight would have lit up his coloring really nice.  I do like his interesting pose!  Nice image Renegade!

Thanks.  I also liked the pose.  Unfortunately it was dark
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Renegade Runner

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Re: Show your Bird Portraits
« Reply #618 on: December 20, 2012, 09:33:22 PM »
Grey Necked Crowned Crane

Rebel, f/5, 1/200, iso 500

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atosk930

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Re: Show your Bird Portraits
« Reply #619 on: December 21, 2012, 07:33:01 AM »
@Kernuak. Yes it is a pigeon. The wood it is perched on top of is a very old, weathered telephone pole. From there I saw him fly off to a larger pine tree if that helps.


Not sure if I've ever shared this one with the group here. I also realize that it's not a hawk after educating myself. I shot this in northern New Jersey. Can anyone ID it?

edit: had trouble with the insert tool the first few times


Is that a pigeon it's feasting on? That would help to size it. It's definitely a falcon, but I'm not sure it is quite big enough for a peregrine, plus I'm not familiar with North American distribution. The hood doesn't look as distinct as normal, but it could be a juvenile bird or it could be the angle.

Krob78

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Re: Show your Bird Portraits
« Reply #620 on: December 21, 2012, 08:27:52 AM »
The Crane is beautiful Ren... Wish we had some of those down here in Florida!  You guys have quite a variety of owls as well, no?

Grey Necked Crowned Crane

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Ken

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scrappydog

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Re: Show your Bird Portraits
« Reply #621 on: December 21, 2012, 08:37:47 AM »
The Crane is beautiful Ren... Wish we had some of those down here in Florida!
There are quite a few at the Animal Kingdom park at Disney World and the Animal Kingdom Lodge savannas.  They are beautiful.

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Re: Show your Bird Portraits
« Reply #621 on: December 21, 2012, 08:37:47 AM »

steven kessel

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Re: Show your Bird Portraits
« Reply #622 on: December 21, 2012, 08:54:02 AM »
Pyrrhuloxia.  EOS 7D, 100-400 4-5.6 L IS, hand held, ISO 320 cropped in PhotoShop, white balance adjusted slightly to account for low late afternoon sunlight.

96Brigadier

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Re: Show your Bird Portraits
« Reply #623 on: December 21, 2012, 09:01:55 AM »
Pyrrhuloxia.  EOS 7D, 100-400 4-5.6 L IS, hand held, ISO 320 cropped in PhotoShop, white balance adjusted slightly to account for low late afternoon sunlight.

How did you do the sharpening?  I can see an outline all the way around the bird that is much noisier than the rest of the picture, I presume that's from whatever sharpening technique you used.

steven kessel

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Re: Show your Bird Portraits
« Reply #624 on: December 21, 2012, 09:07:42 AM »
I don't think I sharpened this one.  It's possible that I did a bit of noise reduction on the background and perhaps the much noisier outline you see is the area inside my outline of the bird.  But, honestly, I don't see it, your eyes are better than mine.

Krob78

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Re: Show your Bird Portraits
« Reply #625 on: December 21, 2012, 09:40:39 AM »
The Crane is beautiful Ren... Wish we had some of those down here in Florida!
There are quite a few at the Animal Kingdom park at Disney World and the Animal Kingdom Lodge savannas.  They are beautiful.
Indeed!  I prefer not to pay the almost $100 to go see them... I would prefer to find them in the wild, although, we certainly have our share of excellent Avian..  ;D
Ken

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Krob78

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Re: Show your Bird Portraits
« Reply #626 on: December 21, 2012, 09:42:35 AM »
I don't think I sharpened this one.  It's possible that I did a bit of noise reduction on the background and perhaps the much noisier outline you see is the area inside my outline of the bird.  But, honestly, I don't see it, your eyes are better than mine.
I see it.  I was thinking maybe setting the radius at around 1.4 or a little less may fix it.  Then again, shooting with the 100-400mm, maybe not quite as tight a crop would reduce the affect.  Nice work though, wouldn't have thought it was a low light image!  Good job on the handheld too...  :D
« Last Edit: December 21, 2012, 09:45:45 AM by Krob78 »
Ken

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Steve Williams

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Re: Show your Bird Portraits
« Reply #627 on: December 21, 2012, 12:17:03 PM »
Here is one of the first images I shot with the 7D back in 2010.  70-200 f/4L IS


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Kernuak

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Re: Show your Bird Portraits
« Reply #628 on: December 21, 2012, 03:40:49 PM »
@Kernuak. Yes it is a pigeon. The wood it is perched on top of is a very old, weathered telephone pole. From there I saw him fly off to a larger pine tree if that helps.


Not sure if I've ever shared this one with the group here. I also realize that it's not a hawk after educating myself. I shot this in northern New Jersey. Can anyone ID it?

edit: had trouble with the insert tool the first few times



Is that a pigeon it's feasting on? That would help to size it. It's definitely a falcon, but I'm not sure it is quite big enough for a peregrine, plus I'm not familiar with North American distribution. The hood doesn't look as distinct as normal, but it could be a juvenile bird or it could be the angle.


Doing a bit of digging, I think it can only be either a peregrine falcon or a prairie falcon, but I'm no expert, especially on North American birds. Looking at the distribution though, neither really quite fits, although I would say the peregrine is the closest match in terms of geography.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peregrine_Falcon
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prairie_Falcon
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serendipidy

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Re: Show your Bird Portraits
« Reply #629 on: December 21, 2012, 03:49:55 PM »
Pyrrhuloxia.  EOS 7D, 100-400 4-5.6 L IS, hand held, ISO 320 cropped in PhotoShop, white balance adjusted slightly to account for low late afternoon sunlight.

Beautiful bird. Nice job. I love my 7D and 100-400mmL.
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Re: Show your Bird Portraits
« Reply #629 on: December 21, 2012, 03:49:55 PM »