Show your Bird Portraits

I was out for a walk in the dunes of Lake Michigan with my son and grandson looking for a hill to slide down when we came upon a pair of eagles in a tree.
I call this one Ninja Angel because of the way it hopped and jumped up a branch then struck a angel wing pose.
 

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The Ninja hop jump before the pose. Pretty amazing to watch this large bird scramble up a tree the way it did.

My grandson was caught in some pickers hollering he was stuck while I'm telling him to hold on a second.
Funny stuff.
 

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Hello CR people!!! :D :D hope you guys enjoy my last bird portraits... I love this extreme closeup of the short-eared owl, its just such an amazing moment to be so close of an wild animal like this!!! ;) ;)
 

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sedwards said:
These white birds have been the hardest for me to get exposure right , i always seem to overexpose and loose all the detail in the feathers. If anyone has any pointers on getting the right exposure on white birds , please chime in.

Not that I'd presume to give you advice, but what settings do you typically use? I have the same problem, of course, with all birds that have a lot of bright white plumage. It's like shooting a pile of fresh snow in the middle of a green forest on a bright sunny day -- seems to confuse my camera's metering. If they give you enough time, could you spot meter, then expose manually from that?
 
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Orangutan said:
sedwards said:
These white birds have been the hardest for me to get exposure right , i always seem to overexpose and loose all the detail in the feathers. If anyone has any pointers on getting the right exposure on white birds , please chime in.

Not that I'd presume to give you advice, but what settings do you typically use? I have the same problem, of course, with all birds that have a lot of bright white plumage. It's like shooting a pile of fresh snow in the middle of a green forest on a bright sunny day -- seems to confuse my camera's metering. If they give you enough time, could you spot meter, then expose manually from that?
I am using manual mode and i have been underexposing up to 1.5 stops for the white birds , but i still need to pull back the highlights in post. I am able to get useable shots but i was jst wondering if there was a rule of thumb for bright white subjects.
 
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