And yet, it is the last shot (The knitter) which has the strength of a fine painting.
Superb light and exposure without any evidence of oversharpening-overprocessing.
skibum5 wrote:
did this make use of multiple exposures or stamp and past or is it a single straight shot?
Firstly, thanks Peter, Rachel and Michael for the kind words.
skibum5, this is a single shot taken early in the AM and there were about 50 egrets in the general vicinity waiting for breakfast to swim by. It was among the last shots taken because the birds were right off the road and, while I was shooting from behind some bushes, some %$@ with a Nikon walked in right on top of them and was surprised that they all flew away. He just laughed and said to me, "well, maybe you can get them again tomorrow." My wife thought that I was beginning to look unpleasant, and being the wise woman that she is, ushered out me out.
Hrow wrote:
Firstly, thanks Peter, Rachel and Michael for the kind words.
skibum5, this is a single shot taken early in the AM and there were about 50 egrets in the general vicinity waiting for breakfast to swim by. It was among the last shots taken because the birds were right off the road and, while I was shooting from behind some bushes, some %$@ with a Nikon walked in right on top of them and was surprised that they all flew away. He just laughed and said to me, "well, maybe you can get them again tomorrow." My wife thought that I was beginning to look unpleasant, and being the wise woman that she is, ushered out me out.