rji2goleez wrote:
A family of foxes have settled in our neighborhood. While the parents are a bit skittish, the young ones are, if anything, curious. It's a wonderful opportunity to watch and photograph them. I'm sure they will be relocated to a more rural area soon but in the meantime, I'm having some fun.
rji2goleez wrote:
A family of foxes have settled in our neighborhood. While the parents are a bit skittish, the young ones are, if anything, curious. It's a wonderful opportunity to watch and photograph them. I'm sure they will be relocated to a more rural area soon but in the meantime, I'm having some fun.
A wonderful group and great opportunity to capture these beautiful little creatures. In the third, fourth, and fifth images, these guys appear to be looking directly at you. How close were you able to get to them?
I was typically between 20-30 yards from these guys and probably could have been closer. These guys are extremely alert. No sneaking up on these creatures. Very sensitive hearing.
mwhartman wrote:
A wonderful group and great opportunity to capture these beautiful little creatures. In the third, fourth, and fifth images, these guys appear to be looking directly at you. How close were you able to get to them?
More large white trillium at Trillium Ravine Nature Preserve, Niles, Michigan. A7RIII, Voigtlander 35/1.4 Nokton Classic (E-mount); 4 images stacked with Helicon Focus. Large white trillium, Niles, Michigan by Danny Burk, on Flickr
DuelingLenses wrote:
Beautiful images everyone. Joshua your images from Indonesia are all simply outstanding!
I sold my 3 Profoto D1 light and purchased 2 D2s. Mainly for the high speed sync capabilities. This will open up a whole new world for shooting in sunlight and for action shots. Everything synced well with the A7R3.
Used my son as a crash test dummy
Thank you, Brett!
One can get away with manual flash units with which you vary the output but the high-sync setup is a must to tame the available light at an outdoor setting. The results look good, Brett!
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Another image from Costa Rica - a hummingbird feeding on a flower of a hairy heliconia plant. That species of heliconia looks bizarre; we encountered that plant for the first time on the second visit to CR.
Saw this young black bear at the Shenandoah National Park this morning. There was no mom around. I was told by another photographer that the bear was abandoned by the mom last year but managed to survive the winter.