Show your Bird Portraits

Hi Folks.
Lots of great shots, makes me wonder about posting mine, but I think I'm improving and would like to know what you folks think please.
Stopped in Mayflower park Southampton on the way home and caught some shots, thought I'd share a few. Quite heavy crops with the 5D and 24-105 f4L, couldn't get any closer due to the slippery nature of the slipway, one more step and I might have joined the swan in Southampton water!
Can I get some feedback on my PP please, have I overdone the sharpening?

IMG_1090_DxO by Graham Stretch, on Flickr

IMG_1089_DxO by Graham Stretch, on Flickr

IMG_1092_DxO by Graham Stretch, on Flickr

IMG_1085_DxO by Graham Stretch, on Flickr

Cheers, Graham.
 
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Valvebounce said:
Hi Folks.
Lots of great shots, makes me wonder about posting mine, but I think I'm improving and would like to know what you folks think please.
Stopped in Mayflower park Southampton on the way home and caught some shots, thought I'd share a few. Quite heavy crops with the 5D and 24-105 f4L, couldn't get any closer due to the slippery nature of the slipway, one more step and I might have joined the swan in Southampton water!
Can I get some feedback on my PP please, have I overdone the sharpening?

Cheers, Graham.

Graham
I have to disagree with Jack over this. There are harsh white halos around the non-white parts of the heads and beaks (and water dripping off), which is the tell-tale sign of over-sharpening. You never want to see any such transitions. Parts of the water have been so over-sharpened they look gritty. The texture of the plumage looks unnatural.

I personally use as little sharpening as possible. With the 7DII, my standard settings are no more than 0.9px/100% for USM or 0.3px/100% for smarten sharpen in PS. With the 5Ds R, I haven't been using any sharpening at all - the images are more than sharp enough and there is less noise.
 
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AlanF said:
Valvebounce said:
Hi Folks.
Lots of great shots, makes me wonder about posting mine, but I think I'm improving and would like to know what you folks think please.
Stopped in Mayflower park Southampton on the way home and caught some shots, thought I'd share a few. Quite heavy crops with the 5D and 24-105 f4L, couldn't get any closer due to the slippery nature of the slipway, one more step and I might have joined the swan in Southampton water!
Can I get some feedback on my PP please, have I overdone the sharpening?

Cheers, Graham.

Graham
I have to disagree with Jack over this. There are harsh white halos around the non-white parts of the heads and beaks (and water dripping off), which is the tell-tale sign of over-sharpening. You never want to see any such transitions. Parts of the water have been so over-sharpened they look gritty. The texture of the plumage looks unnatural.
...
+1 to the comment from AlanF. Too much sharpening.

I want to add a little bit about technique:
Depending on the background and the slipway/ground you were standing on I would have tried to achieve a lower shooting position.
I like the "all water and ripples" BG. So if this could have achieved in this position only, then okay.

Except from that I really like the second pic (IMG_1089_DxO) for the timing and composition. Beautiful.
Maybe a little bit less foreground, slipway ;)
 
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Hi Jack, AlanF, Maximillian.
This is exactly my reasoning for asking, PP is such a subjective thing. I had a notion it was too much after viewing the processed pictures I posted to Flickr on my iPad.
Alan, I was using the 5D, not the 7DII, I guess this would change the numbers you might use, also as I am using DxO 10.?.? I don't know how it would relate to settings from the software you have given. Plus as I said they were harsh crops from the 12Mpix of the sensor, approx 4Mpixel each.
I was also using a pretty mediocre laptop screen whilst trying to be sociable with the misses instead of going and using my desktop (with a better but still not perfect, read less mediocre, monitor) in another room!
I will try again with less sharpening using my better PC.
I was using a bit of +micro contrast, a bit extra lens correction general sharpness, a bit extra lens correction detail sharpness above the preset levels, (both under the same tab) plus some extra unsharp over the preset levels.
The composition was from a slipway, the tide was about half in (or out) leaving me quite high up the slope, I did kneel down to lower the perspective but this was not a planned photo expedition and I was in reasonably smart clothes.
The more distant background is cluttered with decaying pier structure which whilst interesting in itself is not conducive to the improvement of a swan picture! :)
I will try cutting a bit more foreground off, (but you can see from this how slippery it was!).

Thank you all for your input, I welcome constructive criticism for without it how can we progress.

Cheers, Graham.
 
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Valvebounce said:
...
The composition was from a slipway, the tide was about half in (or out) leaving me quite high up the slope, I did kneel down to lower the perspective but this was not a planned photo expedition and I was in reasonably smart clothes.
The more distant background is cluttered with decaying pier structure which whilst interesting in itself is not conducive to the improvement of a swan picture! :)
I will try cutting a bit more foreground off, (but you can see from this how slippery it was!).
...
Thank you for this information.
I was expecting something like that but not sure about it. So therefore, for this conditions and compromises, the results are fine :)
 
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Valvebounce said:
Hi jprusa.
Cool shot, I'm curious, is this one of those shots you could wait a lifetime and never see repeated or does it happen quite often, like the birds that tick pick on water buffalo and hippopotamus?
Thanks for sharing.

Cheers, Graham.

jprusa said:
Neighbors
Hi GraHam,
When there is food involved you see a lot of crazy stuff , just being there at the right time.
Cheers, Joe
 
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Valvebounce said:
Hi jprusa.
Cool shot, I'm curious, is this one of those shots you could wait a lifetime and never see repeated or does it happen quite often, like the birds that tick pick on water buffalo and hippopotamus?
Thanks for sharing.

Cheers, Graham.

jprusa said:
Neighbors

It is very common behaviour, indeed the seagulls are such a pest to the pelicans that they actually leave their 'homes' for less congested areas when seagull season comes upon us.
 
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