Jake Levin
Well-known member

- Adobe Photoshop CC (Macintosh)
I thought this was a cardinal...the beak says I was wrong! The difference is how the upper and lower mandible fit together: cardinals have two triangular mandibles that come together in more or less a straight line, while the pyrrhuloxia has a pronounced downward curve where the beak closes. This female was the first to visit our setup the morning I was there photographing, and you can really see why people who would rather not pronounce the bird's formal name go with "desert cardinal". The male northern cardinal and pyrrhuloxia are easily distinguishable from each other, but the females are much more similar. The light was cloudless sunrise conditions and it created a notable colour cast, so I reduced the yellows in the image and did shadow/highlight adjustments until it looked more or less as I remember it.
7D mkII, 500mm f/4 IS, tripod mounted at a perch/feeder setup
1/800 @ f/7.1, ISO 800
DPP converted
Photoshop processed: square crop, a tiny bit of background work, eye work to remove double catchlight, colour/exposure correction and lowered overall contrast on the perch and bird. NR via neat image.
Thanks for C&C'ing,
Jake
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