That guys needs to my the Snowy's in Florida!!Took this on Tuesday in St James' Park, London. Thought the pelican was getting ready to launch into flight, but instead it spent about 30 seconds "dancing" and then went back to just standing there.
Taken on R5, with RF 800mm (f11, obviously), 3200 ISO and 1/1000.
These are great but your reds are a little too "hot". The luminance can be pulled down on the reds in LR and that should solve that.First, thank you Cog, for pointing out that my photos were too dark. I've (hopefully) corrected it with a new x-rite monitor profile (I discovered you can enter your target monitor brightness directly and now I set it lower to "40" with a temperature of 5,000K). Here is the continuation of the Winter ice photos (brighter):
(R5 & RF 100-500L)
House finch:
View attachment 197154
View attachment 197155
male Northern cardinal:
View attachment 197156
View attachment 197160
View attachment 197158
Caroline chickadee:
View attachment 197159
I hope the brightness is better for "typical viewing" - if not then please let me know.
Cheers!
The pelicans there have their wings clipped so they can't fly away - they are captive birds.Took this on Tuesday in St James' Park, London. Thought the pelican was getting ready to launch into flight, but instead it spent about 30 seconds "dancing" and then went back to just standing there.
Taken on R5, with RF 800mm (f11, obviously), 3200 ISO and 1/1000.
Easily a thousand birds. Some were White-fronted and there was the odd Canada Goose mixed in and no doubt other ducks too. They are not approachable at all and the first shot gives an idea of the distance - much further than I prefer. I saw white and thought, what kind of crop of weeds is this?: "Oh, and the crummy animal eye AF wouldn't grab the eyes!" May it could be because of too many eyes? And I don't want to ask about the distance! Seriously - are all that white dots on the first photo Snows (nice photo BTW)?! Few years ago when I met my first 3 (in group) I was so happy. Later (next year I think I met 2-3 more. Happy again.
After your shots I don't know why I was that happy.
Doesn't matter - it's Hawaii here...
These are great but your reds are a little too "hot". The luminance can be pulled down on the reds in LR and that should solve that.
Catherine
In the HSL section just choose red, then you can customize the range of that red and the saturation slider below it will only affect that selected color range.Thanks, Catherine. I've reduces the saturation on the birds somewhat since the male Cardinals & House Finches have such brilliant reds. But I can try to reduce it and the luminance a bit further as well, but I only use DXO PhotoLab4 and I'm not sure how to reduce the luminance specifically for a red channel. If anyone here knows how to do that, please let me know if possible.
Thanks, privatebydesign! That will help me a lot!In the HSL section just choose red, then you can customize the range of that red and the saturation slider below it will only affect that selected color range.