BIRD IN FLIGHT ONLY -- share your BIF photos here

JMZawodny said:
Jack Douglas said:
Orangutan said:
Jack Douglas said:
JMZawodny said:
Orangutan said:
JMZawodny said:
I had the chance to capture the photo of a lifetime (OK, I have low expectations) and blew it. I needed at least a 3x faster shutter speed to make this work. To be fair, things happened pretty darn fast. This would have been a really cool photo.

Nice try, though. Was that a Cooper's hawk on a starling?

A Cooper's on a robin fledgling. 700mm at 1/400 sec is not a recipe for success.

Ah, but you're supposed to be panning! ;)

Jack

I think he was -- look at the full-size version. I think the problem was that the subject came to an abrupt stop.

Just teasing!! ;D

Jack


No, I posted this for several reasons. First was to open the door for others to post things that almost worked. I'm tired of looking at perfect photos. I learn most from failure. I was out shooting a photo of a helicopter when this all happened around me. I had the camera set up to shoot against a bright sky with the IS set for stills. This photo needed a bump in ISO, a bigger aperture, and the IS set for panning. I had ZERO time to change anything. The cool thing is that this sort of thing happens in my backyard once a week (if only I was retired). I am not a good, let alone a great, photographer. I still have to think a lot before releasing the shutter. I'm really good at determining what I should have done. I try to do things that I have no reason to try or expect success. It all makes me a little bit better.

Thanks for posting it. BTW, doesn't the latest Photoshop have some tool to reduce motion blur? This might be a good candidate for that.
 
Upvote 0
Orangutan said:
JMZawodny said:
Jack Douglas said:
Orangutan said:
Jack Douglas said:
JMZawodny said:
Orangutan said:
JMZawodny said:
I had the chance to capture the photo of a lifetime (OK, I have low expectations) and blew it. I needed at least a 3x faster shutter speed to make this work. To be fair, things happened pretty darn fast. This would have been a really cool photo.

Nice try, though. Was that a Cooper's hawk on a starling?

A Cooper's on a robin fledgling. 700mm at 1/400 sec is not a recipe for success.

Ah, but you're supposed to be panning! ;)

Jack

I think he was -- look at the full-size version. I think the problem was that the subject came to an abrupt stop.

Just teasing!! ;D

Jack


No, I posted this for several reasons. First was to open the door for others to post things that almost worked. I'm tired of looking at perfect photos. I learn most from failure. I was out shooting a photo of a helicopter when this all happened around me. I had the camera set up to shoot against a bright sky with the IS set for stills. This photo needed a bump in ISO, a bigger aperture, and the IS set for panning. I had ZERO time to change anything. The cool thing is that this sort of thing happens in my backyard once a week (if only I was retired). I am not a good, let alone a great, photographer. I still have to think a lot before releasing the shutter. I'm really good at determining what I should have done. I try to do things that I have no reason to try or expect success. It all makes me a little bit better.

Thanks for posting it. BTW, doesn't the latest Photoshop have some tool to reduce motion blur? This might be a good candidate for that.

It may. I also have access to some deconvolution software that might clean these photos up.
 
Upvote 0
JMZawodny said:
Jack Douglas said:
Orangutan said:
Jack Douglas said:
JMZawodny said:
Orangutan said:
JMZawodny said:
I had the chance to capture the photo of a lifetime (OK, I have low expectations) and blew it. I needed at least a 3x faster shutter speed to make this work. To be fair, things happened pretty darn fast. This would have been a really cool photo.

Nice try, though. Was that a Cooper's hawk on a starling?

A Cooper's on a robin fledgling. 700mm at 1/400 sec is not a recipe for success.

Ah, but you're supposed to be panning! ;)

Jack

I think he was -- look at the full-size version. I think the problem was that the subject came to an abrupt stop.

Just teasing!! ;D

Jack


No, I posted this for several reasons. First was to open the door for others to post things that almost worked. I'm tired of looking at perfect photos. I learn most from failure. I was out shooting a photo of a helicopter when this all happened around me. I had the camera set up to shoot against a bright sky with the IS set for stills. This photo needed a bump in ISO, a bigger aperture, and the IS set for panning. I had ZERO time to change anything. The cool thing is that this sort of thing happens in my backyard once a week (if only I was retired). I am not a good, let alone a great, photographer. I still have to think a lot before releasing the shutter. I'm really good at determining what I should have done. I try to do things that I have no reason to try or expect success. It all makes me a little bit better.
Well I would have thousands that nearly worked that I could post here, I've had the 7D MKII since December and I think the shutter count life-expectancy is now nearly been reached.
But I think all that I want is to be able to continually improve and get some good shots that I can show, and (as was pointed out) know what I did wrong when the shot is not as good as I expected.
The pictures here show me that my equipment is not the limiting factor (unfortunately).

I wish I was at the stage where I would have been able to get perfect shots without thinking in such a situation, but I am not

Cheers Brian
 
Upvote 0
Brian, I can't get the bird in the viewfinder so you can be an encouragement to me. One of my problems is trying for tighter and not being able to handle 300 2.8 II X 2 III due to shaking. Bare 300 would be more realistic but then cropping ...... Actually my 70-200 is probably what I should drop back to.

Jack
 
Upvote 0
Jack Douglas said:
Brian, I can't get the bird in the viewfinder so you can be an encouragement to me. One of my problems is trying for tighter and not being able to handle 300 2.8 II X 2 III due to shaking. Bare 300 would be more realistic but then cropping ...... Actually my 70-200 is probably what I should drop back to.

Jack

You can appreciate how pleased I was to simply get the hawk and prey in the frame using the 500mm & 1.4x. That was far and away the fastest thing (angular rate, not absolute speed) I've had to try and track. Just need to keep practicing ...
 
Upvote 0
Jack Douglas said:
Brian, I can't get the bird in the viewfinder so you can be an encouragement to me. One of my problems is trying for tighter and not being able to handle 300 2.8 II X 2 III due to shaking. Bare 300 would be more realistic but then cropping ...... Actually my 70-200 is probably what I should drop back to.

Jack
Hi Jack, I am tending to drop back from 400mm to 200m when trying to get Herons flying nearby now, as I just cannot follow them either if I'm too tight. I also have bad shakes due to a nerve ailment, so it does not help.
but I also have many series of shots where I keep the moving Bird under the active Focus points, but many of them are still unsharp. So I am experimenting there too.
As JMZawodny pointed out, we need to keep practicing.

Good luck and keep posting though.

Remember if anyone criticises you its only because they want to buy your equipment at a low price....... :-[

Cheers Brian
 
Upvote 0
Jack Douglas said:
bjd said:
Jack Douglas said:
bjd said:
Jack Douglas said:
Oh what a moment to capture! Very nice.

We human mothers/fathers can take a lesson from the woodpecker. ;)

Jack
Used to ride by Bike from Northallerton to Boosebeck. Fell off a lot when I was young.
I dont think it did me any harm!

Cheers Brian

What? you mean we should be out banging our heads against trees more ? ;)


Thanks Jack

I hadn't thought of that. Maybe I should try it - I've heard the expression "to knock some sense into your head" ;D

Jack

Where I come from, Yorkshire, we've been trying that for years now.
I think its working :o

So now I know why I have problems, my grandparents came from Yorks. Boosebeck.

Jack
 
Upvote 0
Equipment at a low price - well thanks for that - now I know!

When I can't lift the camera I'll quit practicing but not before. I also have a bit of shake that is a physical ailment and am always trying to brace myself or pulling the strap tight against my shoulder etc. I'm convincing myself that when (hopefully) I get the 1DX II I'll practice BIF a lot more. ;D Thanks for the encouragement.

I did find a few months with the 1D4 was way more productive than with the 6D though. However, ISO 800 was not nearly as pleasing as 600 and I needed higher ISO to get half decent shutter speed. Of course eagles are a lot easier than many birds. 300 X2

Jack
 

Attachments

  • Eagle_1D4_18267.JPG
    Eagle_1D4_18267.JPG
    1.6 MB · Views: 134
  • Eagle crop_1D4_18097.JPG
    Eagle crop_1D4_18097.JPG
    1.4 MB · Views: 153
Upvote 0
Jack Douglas said:
Equipment at a low price - well thanks for that - now I know!

When I can't lift the camera I'll quit practicing but not before. I also have a bit of shake that is a physical ailment and am always trying to brace myself or pulling the strap tight against my shoulder etc. I'm convincing myself that when (hopefully) I get the 1DX II I'll practice BIF a lot more. ;D Thanks for the encouragement.

I did find a few months with the 1D4 was way more productive than with the 6D though. However, ISO 800 was not nearly as pleasing as 600 and I needed higher ISO to get half decent shutter speed. Of course eagles are a lot easier than many birds. 300 X2

Jack

Two sweet photos. Very nice.
 
Upvote 0
Sandwich Tern Series.
1DX I, 100-400 II @400 mm, ISO 1600, f8, 1/2000.

Was lucky to have a day w/o salt spray so I could stand in the surf to shoot these. Played around w auto focus setting and settled on 5 and the IS set to mode 3. I'm not sure the IS is really helpful at this shutter speed - would appreciate comments on this.
 

Attachments

  • DQ0R1327_hires_v3.JPG
    DQ0R1327_hires_v3.JPG
    2.2 MB · Views: 107
  • DQ0R1328_hires_v2.JPG
    DQ0R1328_hires_v2.JPG
    1.9 MB · Views: 122
Upvote 0