Only just got around to processing this one. Think it was taken on my 1st day of working from home due to the COVID-19 pandemic in late March.
This Is our girl Daisy who's nearly 2 years old now (how time flies). This was taken indoors with my new EM1 MKIII and the 40-150 F2.8 at full reach @ ISO 3200 and wide open at F2.8
GHO nest. There are 2 chicks but only one is visible most of the time.
EM1x
300mm+1.4x TC
I have GHOs nesting close to my house for the last 5 years. I never get tired of these beautiful birds. The last picture shows something that I have noticed over this time span. The chicks often look cross-eyed... but that goes away as they mature.
I just added an E-M10 III with 14-42 EZ to my Olympus stable. The 10.3 replaces my much loved 10.2 that was gifted to my brother after it was supplanted by the E-M5 III last fall. I missed the 10.2 a lot and when a deal on a refurbished E-MK10 III kit came up on the Olympus site, I couldn't resist.
Love the bear shot @mitesh as well as the eggs. Superb colors on the eggs.
@maf27 that's a really nice city shot with superb detail and lovely colors
@galenapass love the last shot, it really is cross-eyed! Great capture
@sootchucker she's adorable! The 40-150 has been my most used lens without a doubt and the one I've used almost exclusively for portraits, the bokeh is nice if the background isn't too busy and the sharpness and contrast are superb from wide open.
galenapass wrote:
GHO nest. There are 2 chicks but only one is visible most of the time.
EM1x
300mm+1.4x TC
I have GHOs nesting close to my house for the last 5 years. I never get tired of these beautiful birds. The last picture shows something that I have noticed over this time span. The chicks often look cross-eyed... but that goes away as they mature.
This is not a m43 image but it shows the "cross-eyed" look better.
Fruit fly
Based on 1:1 reproduction rate, it can be inferred that this fruit fly was approximately 5mm in length.
Canon EF 100mm f/2.8 macro & EM-10 Mk III Listera Ovata