Since It Quit Raining....

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Arthur Morris

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Dec 13, 2007
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32,701
Location
Indian Lake Estates, FL
Sandhill-Crane-adult-looking-back-BPN_Y9C3703--Indian-Lake-Estates,-FL.jpg

Since it quit raining non-stop on Sunday afternoon we've had only one half clear morning down here. And I really enjoyed that 20 minutes of sunshine.... I am hoping for more soon :S3:.

This image was created with the tripod-mounted Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens, the 1.4X III TC, and the EOS-1D MIV. ISO 400. Evaluative metering at zero: 1/400 sec. at f/11 set manually.

Don't be shy; all comments welcome and I am here to learn too :S3:.
 
Artie:

Very sharp on head and neck with graceful fall off of DOF on back.

Nicely exposed. Great BG and colors overall.

I might clean up the small specular high light on bill tip.

He seems a bit large in the frame. For the sake of the members, could you elaborate on your usual guidelines for size of bird in frame? Do the guidelines vary depending on head shot/portrait vs. a full body shot?

I like the bill clear of the back, no merge.

Cheers.
 
Last edited:
Awesome IQ, detail, & color, Artie! Love the eye, what kind of bird? Randy makes some good suggestions.
 
Great exposure and the details are good especially on the crown and beak. I agree with Randy about the single highlight on the tip of beak, although I didn't see it until he pointed that out. :e3
 
Love the pose, with bill clear of back. Great dof at f11 with entire bill and eye in sharp focus. Beautiful composition. Highlight already noted.
 
Artie, super pose with a pefect HA. The IQ, detail, colours and sharpness on the head and bill are simply superb. I really like the overall light and exposure too. I would have expected with F/11, that the body would have been in the DOF range.
 
Great portrait composition and excellent use of depth of field to get all the eye and the beak sharp.

I actually like that little highlight on the tip of the beak - it repeats the catch light from the eye and somehow stops my eye from going beyond the end of the beak.
 
Looks to me more like a grain of sand on tip of beak. The bird appears to be a Sandhill Crane, and a very handsome one at that. Where did you find him? I'm comfortable with the crop; it's a facial portrait with plenty of room, and the OOF back giving context and substance to the image. I especially like the subtle colors, with no garish exaggeration.
 
Artie: Very sharp on head and neck with graceful fall off of DOF on back. Nicely exposed. Great BG and colors overall. I might clean up the small specular high light on bill tip.
He seems a bit large in the frame. For the sake of the members, could you elaborate on your usual guidelines for size of bird in frame? Do the guidelines vary depending on head shot/portrait vs. a full body shot? I like the bill clear of the back, no merge. Cheers.

Thanks Randy. It is a specular highlight at the end of the bill, and you know that I hate "bill shine." I looked at this this single, soft spec hi and decided that it added character so I left it.... My general rule is to go no larger than 75% of the width or height of the bird for portraits that include the whole bird. With body parts images all rules are off (except for pure head portraits where I go back to the <75% rule.) This is probably 10-15% off the bottom and 10-15% off the left. I love the bird's high in the high left corner and the slight pano look. For me, I would not change a pixel compositionally here. Good question; TFA. :S3: Is it OK if Mods and participants learn too :e3.
 
_Y9C3703--Indian-Lake-Estates,-FL.jpg

Here's what I started with.... A bit of bill clean-up, and a 15% Linear Burn on the bright WHITEs. And the perfect crop :).
 
Looks to me more like a grain of sand on tip of beak. The bird appears to be a Sandhill Crane, and a very handsome one at that. Where did you find him? I'm comfortable with the crop; it's a facial portrait with plenty of room, and the OOF back giving context and substance to the image. I especially like the subtle colors, with no garish exaggeration.

Thanks Ron. I agree :). It is a specular highlight on the bill. They are both common and tame right where I live. They walk up and down Park BLVD and down by the lake there are sometimes as many as 20. And they have chicks in FRB/MAR/APR. You can get head shots with 70-200 if you want.... Indian Lake Estates, FL. We will be opening a gallery in the house soon so come down! And bring your bathing suit; I am building a pretty good sized lap pool in my backyard :).

Florida Panther has been seen several times here over the past few years....
 
I really like this. Love the look back pose that you captured. The catchlight twinkle in the eye adds something as well. Excellent detail and well exposed.
 
Exceptional details Artie.

Also thanks for the info on Florida sandhill cranes. I checked few images from Bosque and they have smaller bills.

-sid
 

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