|
| Group |
Round |
C/R |
Comment |
Date |
Image |
| 69 |
Feb 26 |
Comment |
Thank you for all the comments. |
Feb 17th |
| 69 |
Feb 26 |
Reply |
Ooooh. Thank you. I had not noticed it till you mentioned it. Definitely could be opened up to provide some detail in the area. Thank you. |
Feb 13th |
| 69 |
Feb 26 |
Reply |
Thank you Diane. What you see is the lower tusk. Warthogs have four tusks. They are actually modified canines and the upper ones grow constantly. The lower ones are shorter but a lot sharper and are used for fighting and defending against predators. |
Feb 10th |
| 69 |
Feb 26 |
Comment |
The picture is way too underexposed to discern any detail. Increasing the ISO to 800 or so might have solved the exposure problem (the 5D3 would not introduce much noise. And if exposed correctly the ISO should not matter). |
Feb 10th |
| 69 |
Feb 26 |
Comment |
This a Japanese macaque. The photograph is sharp. The deep shadows "blacks" out the eyes and the interest is lost. Exposing for the eyes, without a fill flash, however, would result in blown highlights, but I am not sure it its allowed in the zoo. Or you could wait till the animal turned to the light to fill in the shadows on the face. |
Feb 10th |
| 69 |
Feb 26 |
Comment |
Beautiful portrait. I wouldn't change anything. |
Feb 10th |
| 69 |
Feb 26 |
Comment |
Love it. Beautifully exposed, tack sharp and nice expression. The snow adds an extra element of art and conveys a sense of motion. |
Feb 10th |
| 69 |
Feb 26 |
Comment |
I do like the edited, lighter version better. I might have used an ND filter and exposed quite a bit longer to smoothen out the water, but only so much so as not cause blurred clouds. |
Feb 10th |
| 69 |
Feb 26 |
Comment |
Love the image. I would bring down the contrast a teeny bit as elephants are not very contrasty creatures. Maybe bring up the exposure a lil bit too.
I had posted a similar image on my Instagram page last week. I always describe whats happening in the images. I found this short note: Play sharpens survival skills: Elephant calves extend an invitation to play by placing their trunk over another's head. Sparring is an important play behavior that helps build strength and test new defense maneuvers in a safe zone. Credit: © 2021 O'Connell & Rodwell |
Feb 10th |
7 comments - 2 replies for Group 69
|
7 comments - 2 replies Total
|