Vince68 wrote:
Nice shots, colors are great.
Thanks Vince68 glad you enjoyed them.
sailorsmom wrote:
Beautiful, rdubreuil! Love the color that being reflected on the water!
Thanks very much, glad you liked them.
Stash wrote:
I agree with you on the color. Very nice.
Thanks Stash, glad you liked it.
spudkota wrote:
Really enjoyed !
Thank you Spudkota I appreciate that.
kpmac wrote:
Really nice. Great colors.
Thank you, I also like how the water gives the colors a feather like effect.
Thank you Cwilson341, much appreciated.
Did you try making a selection and using fill "content aware", that generally does a pretty good job.
Unfortunately not all DSLRs can do multi-exposure. If you don't have the manual I'd suggest a trip to their respective websites for more information.
Out for a seasonal shoot, came across this guy hanging with a gang of ducks. I really loved the blast of color from the fall foliage, really makes him stand out.
Same site, link to the moths: http://www.discoverlife.org/mp/20q?guide=Moth
Nice shot, here's another resource for ID of Moths, Butterflies and Catapillars
http://www.discoverlife.org/mp/20q?guide=Caterpillars
I would agree also: http://www.discoverlife.org/mp/20q?guide=Caterpillars
Sphinxman is correct, the half press function for auto focus must be disabled once you've assigned bbf to AE-L/AF-L (auto exposure lock/auto focus lock). You can then assign your shutter release to only release the shutter or add AE-L to the half press function. Once you've assigned your bbf there's is no longer a need for the AF-L function, it's now automatic. When you're pressing the AE-L/AF-L button and holding it down you're in auto focus continuous and when you release it you're in single point focus and it locks focus at the point you released the button. Since AE-L is a very useful function I suggest you assign it to the shutter release half press, that way you can meter one part of a scene and lock it by holding the shutter release half way down like you used to do for auto focus lock and recompose if needed.