|
| Group |
Round |
C/R |
Comment |
Date |
Image |
| 72 |
Nov 25 |
Comment |
Hi Bruce - Great capture of a sad subject. It reminds me that nature shows us all phases of life - not just the healthy strong, but all the others too, and all of them merit documentation. |
Nov 23rd |
| 72 |
Nov 25 |
Comment |
Hi Karen - Great photo and very interesting the way the tail and right arm create a frame around the face. I don't know moneys anywhere near well enough to interpret the facial expression, but in my lay sense it doesn't read as grumpy to me, but rather as patient and aware. I saw some Howler Monkeys recently in Costa Rica and they didn't have this orangey fur - very interesting. |
Nov 23rd |
| 72 |
Nov 25 |
Reply |
Hi All - Thanks for all the comments and sorry for the slow reply. I've been traveling in Costa Rica and will hopefully have some photos from that trip for the coming months. |
Nov 23rd |
| 72 |
Nov 25 |
Comment |
Maria - Wonderful photo! I'm a little surprised that f/5.6 resulted in all Zebras in focus, but it did. Zebras can blend into the background and almost disappear in some settings, but here they stand out. Wonderful to see that collection of stripes, manes, eyes and noses! |
Nov 4th |
| 72 |
Nov 25 |
Comment |
Isaac - Great image and tribute to Lolita. Seems like a rare image that would work for both nature and human-interest-photojournalism. |
Nov 3rd |
| 72 |
Nov 25 |
Comment |
Very interesting photo Adrian! Looks otherworldly and seems impossible that trees and plants would spring forth from this terrain. The image is very well framed and captures the angle of the hill.
I'm curious about your settings. 1/1,250 s seems fast for a scene where there isn't much movement. Did you consider lowering the ISO and the shutter speed? |
Nov 3rd |
5 comments - 1 reply for Group 72
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5 comments - 1 reply Total
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