Ugly Hedgehog - Photography Forum
Home Active Topics Newest Pictures Search Login Register
Main Photography Discussion
Removing A Chain Link Fence From Your Favorite Zoo Animal
Page <<first <prev 3 of 4 next>
Jul 23, 2022 11:20:42   #
bobburk3 Loc: Maryland
 
Nicely done. There are some other tutorials on YouTube that are similar. They work amazingly well.

Reply
Jul 23, 2022 11:25:45   #
recb
 
Great job! And now for the chain link fence in the background! :-)

Reply
Jul 23, 2022 11:58:02   #
bwana Loc: Bergen, Alberta, Canada
 
Hereford wrote:
I took this Lion last week, but he just would not move back from the fence for me. So I googled up how to do that and Anthony Morganti came to the rescue. I thought I would try his technique.

This is very labor intensive so would not recommend unless you have a really stellar keeper. My Lion does not rise to that level, but I used it as a learning experience. The Morganti link:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kuNDnKlH3UI

Amazing end result!

bwa

Reply
 
 
Jul 23, 2022 12:07:49   #
JimG1 Loc: Waxahachie, TX
 
Great job. Thanks for sharing.

Reply
Jul 23, 2022 13:18:26   #
Jsykes
 
Hereford wrote:
I took this Lion last week, but he just would not move back from the fence for me. So I googled up how to do that and Anthony Morganti came to the rescue. I thought I would try his technique.

This is very labor intensive so would not recommend unless you have a really stellar keeper. My Lion does not rise to that level, but I used it as a learning experience. The Morganti link:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kuNDnKlH3UI



Reply
Jul 23, 2022 13:24:06   #
Urnst Loc: Brownsville, Texas
 
recb wrote:
Great job! And now for the chain link fence in the background! :-)



Reply
Jul 23, 2022 13:30:58   #
Alphabravo2020
 
Hereford wrote:
I took this Lion last week, but he just would not move back from the fence for me. So I googled up how to do that and Anthony Morganti came to the rescue. I thought I would try his technique.

This is very labor intensive so would not recommend unless you have a really stellar keeper. My Lion does not rise to that level, but I used it as a learning experience. The Morganti link:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kuNDnKlH3UI


You can also shoot wide open and then focus on your subject. The fence will magically disappear.

Reply
 
 
Jul 23, 2022 13:39:18   #
AirWalter Loc: Tipp City, Ohio
 
Hereford wrote:
I took this Lion last week, but he just would not move back from the fence for me. So I googled up how to do that and Anthony Morganti came to the rescue. I thought I would try his technique.

This is very labor intensive so would not recommend unless you have a really stellar keeper. My Lion does not rise to that level, but I used it as a learning experience. The Morganti link:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kuNDnKlH3UI


OMG Susan, guess whats in the back yard by the chicken coup?

Reply
Jul 23, 2022 13:40:07   #
montephoto
 
Alphabravo2020 wrote:
You can also shoot wide open and then focus on your subject. The fence will magically disappear.


No it will not, in this case. Look at the image and you will see that the lion is too close to the fence for that to work.

Reply
Jul 23, 2022 14:49:21   #
jerryc41 Loc: Catskill Mts of NY
 
Thanks for that

Reply
Jul 23, 2022 15:00:32   #
Retired CPO Loc: Travel full time in an RV
 
whatdat wrote:
Thanks for info. I have put my lens right against a fence & eliminated the fence in pic. But, alas, that is not usually viable at the zoo.


Especially when there is something with big teeth just on the other side!

Reply
 
 
Jul 23, 2022 15:02:38   #
rbmitch123
 
The Morganti link:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kuNDnKlH3UI[/quote]

Reply
Jul 23, 2022 15:03:41   #
rbmitch123
 
Excellent technique for removing power lines from a photo. Maybe easier than a fence.

Reply
Jul 23, 2022 15:10:07   #
cwp3420
 
Hereford wrote:
I took this Lion last week, but he just would not move back from the fence for me. So I googled up how to do that and Anthony Morganti came to the rescue. I thought I would try his technique.

This is very labor intensive so would not recommend unless you have a really stellar keeper. My Lion does not rise to that level, but I used it as a learning experience. The Morganti link:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kuNDnKlH3UI


That’s awesome. I’ll try that myself.

Reply
Jul 23, 2022 15:11:08   #
spaceytracey Loc: East Glacier Park, MT
 
Hereford wrote:
I took this Lion last week, but he just would not move back from the fence for me. So I googled up how to do that and Anthony Morganti came to the rescue. I thought I would try his technique.

This is very labor intensive so would not recommend unless you have a really stellar keeper. My Lion does not rise to that level, but I used it as a learning experience. The Morganti link:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kuNDnKlH3UI


Nice! The YouTube vid is great.

Reply
Page <<first <prev 3 of 4 next>
If you want to reply, then register here. Registration is free and your account is created instantly, so you can post right away.
Main Photography Discussion
UglyHedgehog.com - Forum
Copyright 2011-2024 Ugly Hedgehog, Inc.