I think this is an excellent first attempt!
before we can suggest stuff...what gear do you already have?
and is wildlife something that really interests you?
This is a discussion on Flying Home within the Critiques forums, part of the Photography & Fine art photography category; I think this is an excellent first attempt! before we can suggest stuff...what gear do you already have? and is ...
I think this is an excellent first attempt!
before we can suggest stuff...what gear do you already have?
and is wildlife something that really interests you?
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"You have to milk the cow quite a lot, and get plenty of milk to get a little cheese." Henri Cartier-Bresson from The Decisive Moment.
Thanks....
I have a Sony A200 with the kit lens 18-70mm and a
sigma 70-300 F4.5.6 APO DG and a tri-pod (no flash or other lenses)
I am interested in a variety of photography and thought that
wildlife one would be interesting as well. I have mostly done nature
shots, ie. flowers, leaves etc.
E
Last edited by Elle; 06-16-2009 at 09:29 AM.
The aperture of the lenses is also a crucial piece of info. especially the zoom.
patience is a key part, but also waiting for the right light, using a polarizer on bland skies. Being ready, being able to track moving objects, unserstanding composition. All these can help.
- Please connect with me further
Photo tours of Montreal - Private photography courses
- Join the new Photography.ca Facebook page
- Follow me on Twitter http://twitter.com/markokulik
- Follow me on Google+ https://plus.google.com/u/0/111159185852360398018/posts
- Check out the photography podcast
"You have to milk the cow quite a lot, and get plenty of milk to get a little cheese." Henri Cartier-Bresson from The Decisive Moment.
I think marko nailed it on the head.Lovely first attempt! Waaaaayyyyy better than mine!!
My new blog as of Nov/10
http://katchickloski.wordpress.com/
Thanks Marko
I actually do have a polarizing filter on the 70-300mm
Patience is the key I am sure!
Hi Elle
I'm still new at it too. But I found positioning by a place that funnels the birds into a narrower area and getting your focus, exposure and adjusting the polarizing filter set in the centre of that area helps.
cheers
EJC
That's a nice shot Elle. I like it.
We often look at photos and wonder "How the hell did the photographer get that shot ... I'm never so lucky"
Well the answer is not always that the photographer was lucky at all. It's often because they have placed themselves in a good place at a good time to increase the odds of capturing the type of shot they wanted. Quite often that can mean waiting around or frequenting a certain place as often as it takes. They make their own luck in this way. That's where the patience comes in.
Settings etc will depend on so many variables so it's really hard to suggest anything of course but experience will help there and the only way to get that is get out and shoot your ass off!
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