Photograph Information |
Photographer's Comments |
Challenge: National Parks (Standard Editing*) Camera: Canon EOS-20D Lens: Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS Location: Some wildlife sanctuary or other, England Date: Jun 19, 2012 Aperture: f/10 ISO: 100 Shutter: 1/250 Galleries: Animals, Birds Date Uploaded: Aug 29, 2016
|
Just because it's a wild animal in a wildlife refuge doesn't mean you can't use artificial light.
I took this a few years ago, when I was reaching a point of disillusionment with wildlife photography as a whole. So what if you can shoot a wild bird in its natural habitat with a long lens and capture it exactly the same way everyone else does? Why does posing and studio lighting have to be confined to the studio, and human models? What happens if you break this taboo about wildlife and artificial light, and start treating your wild animals the same way as your studio models?
This Yellow-Headed Caracara was shot in a wild environment, but with a single portable flash remotely triggered off to the left of the frame. Actually a shot in broad overcast daylight, the flash allowed me to shoot with a low iso and fast shutter, and turn this into a dramatic low-key scene.
Some may recognise this as similar in style to another artificially lit wildlife photo, Ecliptic:
In fact this was shot in the same week, at more or less the same location, and of course with the same motive.
After I took these photos, I put down my arms and went away from photography as a whole for a few years. Now I'm back with a slightly different perspective, but this was one of the shots I liked more from that period that I never got to enter on DPChallenge back then - so it's nice to be able to trawl my archives now to dig out something like this.
Editing steps: Contrast adjustmenet, dodging and burning, cloning of stray feathers (these guys are messy eaters), resize, selective sharpen. |
Author | Thread |
|
09/06/2016 12:45:44 PM |
Hello from the critique club
An interesting image that meets the challenge well.
I agree Eugene, why not give your birds the full model treatment especially if the end result is as good as it is here! Not only is there some lovely feather detail but the tip of that beak is wonderfully emphasised through the judicious placing of the light. The highlight in the eye also adds to the atmosphere and all of this against that black backdrop it all works so well. We̢۪re all really pleased you got the chance to submit this and we̢۪re also pleased you came back, keep up the good work. |
|
Photographer found comment helpful. |
Comments Made During the Challenge  |
|
09/03/2016 08:09:03 PM |
Somebody should call the Sierra Club , alert them to all the wonderful photos in this challenge. It's truly amazing. What a beautiful planet we have to live on. Thanks for posting this shot. |
|
Photographer found comment helpful. |
|
09/02/2016 01:42:37 PM |
Good feather detail and clarity on the eye and beak. I'm wondering how you got the black background...taken in a National Zoo? I'll be curious where this was taken. And I like your crop for this as well... |
|
Photographer found comment helpful. |
Home -
Challenges -
Community -
League -
Photos -
Cameras -
Lenses -
Learn -
Help -
Terms of Use -
Privacy -
Top ^
DPChallenge, and website content and design, Copyright © 2001-2025 Challenging Technologies, LLC.
All digital photo copyrights belong to the photographers and may not be used without permission.
Current Server Time: 03/10/2025 10:39:09 PM EDT.