Retired CPO wrote:
I love it!! You don't loan out that Fuji do you?
LOL that's a great suggestion. A little side hustle lol
This is Boone. He's a rescue dog all the way from Guam. I had the pleasure of babysitting him while his new owner had to leave town for a few days. He's very playful and very mischievous lol... and very sweet. His life before being rescued (by my friends daughter whose husband is stationed in Guam) consisted of running feral with a huge pack of other feral dogs. The locals don't like the dogs much, so nothing is done by either Guam locals or Guam government to curb their mating and/or treat any medical issues. Very sad for the dogs, and not unlike how things are in many other countries. There are a group of Americans in Guam that rescue the dogs as they can-- and then fly them all over the world for adoption, but they run on a shoestring budget. Boone was one of the lucky ones. Can't wait to babysit him again!
Photo taken with a Nikon D700 and vintage Nikon AF-D 50mm f1.8
dennis2146 wrote:
Thank you very much indigoblues for a great question. I can only answer for myself but I was/am trying to show the personality of that particular bird. The first photo shows his hair/feathers smoothed out. The second shows a definite bad hair day, one shows him with his mouth wide open and another shows his yellow feet that a Snowy Egret has. For me each photo is a different aspect of this particular bird. Sure I could have shown just one photo but I ask you, which one? Each is different and I like them all.
I appreciate you stopping by,
Dennis
Thank you very much indigoblues for a great questi... (
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Thank you for answering, Dennis!
AzPicLady wrote:
That's very well done. I've never been as successful as you in stitching images together.
Thank you. Believe it or not, I took this panorama handheld, as I do most of them. I guess I just have steady hands-- plus LR does a great job in the stitching process.
I have a comment... I'm just curious why you posted so many shots of almost exactly the same subject matter-- just moved slightly for each photo. I've noticed this on this site. Lots and lots of photos in one post of almost exactly the same subject matter and composition. I wonder, why don't you just pick the best photo of the group and go with it?
View of the setting sun looking west from the town of Paloma in the Sierra Nevada foothills. Lake Pardee is in the background.
Fuji GFX 50R and Zeiss Makro-Planar 100mm f2