absolutely amazing pictures, the colors all compliment each other and the detail is stellar. your pictures are probably as close as i will ever get to a peregrine falcon, so keep taking them. i will never grow tired of them. thanks for sharing.
volhoosier wrote:
absolutely amazing pictures, the colors all compliment each other and the detail is stellar. your pictures are probably as close as i will ever get to a peregrine falcon, so keep taking them. i will never grow tired of them. thanks for sharing.
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morris wrote:
Wonderful set Kambiz. Those warm backgrounds are super. No picks, all great and voting.
Morris
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johnohio wrote:
Really good looking shots ! Love the subject and warm backgrounds. Well done set !
John
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Bobg657 wrote:
Wonderful Kambiz, looking forward to seeing more!
Bob
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louie champan wrote:
Incredible work, keep them coming.
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kmunroe wrote:
love the falcons Kambiz
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George Welch wrote:
Really impressive work, Kambiz. YGMV.
Cheers,
George
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RKnecht wrote:
I can never get tired of images like these. Great set with great backgrounds.
Thank you all for your kind comments... Very much appreciate it all...
I will add my compliments to the rest - spectacular images.
I have to ask, although you don't have to answer: what's your keeper rate? I've never seen a peregrine falcon and I don't know how fast they move. Are you required to shoot the a1 at (its incredibly fast) max FPS, or can you be more deliberate?
I will add my compliments to the rest - spectacular images.
I have to ask, although you don't have to answer: what's your keeper rate? I've never seen a peregrine falcon and I don't know how fast they move. Are you required to shoot the a1 at (its incredibly fast) max FPS, or can you be more deliberate?
Again, great images. Thanks for sharing.
Steve
Thanks a lot Steve... For normal non-diving flight shots, yes, I certainly keep at max FPS, and if the peregrine happens to fly closer to me, my keeper rate would generally be high enough that I would have a hard time choosing which ones to keep and which ones to delete . Now, when they dive, it is a different story as they can reach crazy fast speeds of 300+ km/hr and just keeping them in my frame is a real challenge (unless they are too far which would mean poor IQ anyway)!