This photo shows what the aging Canon T2i can do with a little post-processing thrown in.
The lens contributes more than a camera would though the fact that the camera's sensor is 18mp helps... What lens did you use ?
Jim Bob wrote:
This photo shows what the aging Canon T2i can do with a little post-processing thrown in.
Jim Bob with this image you've proven what 90% of successful photography is all about. It's the person behind the camera that produces desirable results. This is a very good image depicting that. The other 10%? When a technically specific picture has to be taken and requires a certain type of hardware.
Thank you all for taking the time to provide your enlightening comments. I used the Canon 100-400 L, old version. By the way, the photo is a lot sharper than rendered on this site.
Lovely feather detail! tfs it!
Robert
Very nice capture. The lens and the photographer are equally as important as the camera.
Andrea.Jarrell wrote:
Very nice capture. The lens and the photographer are equally as important as the camera.
Agreed. With a healthy dose of luck thrown in. Achieving sharp focus on a small, moving target is a difficult challenge regardless of one's level of skill.
Some how this guy got in our house. I had to quick get him out befour the cats got him.
In our house.
theglove wrote:
Some how this guy got in our house. I had to quick get him out befour the cats got him.
Geesus. Your photo is a lot more compelling than the one I submitted.
steffro1 wrote:
Lovely feather detail! tfs it!
Robert
Thank you. I think that is one thing that makes a bird photo so inviting, in addition to getting the eyes in focus.
ebbote wrote:
Excellent shot Jim.
I was lucky with the bokeh. The background was a wooded snow-covered landscape. Worked out beautifully.
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