Great shots! I was thinking about this lens or this same purpose. Do you like it? Any problems or concerns with it?
Jay
Here are a few of the Snowy Owl images I've captured in western NY.
Thanks,
John, Tom, and Retired
Retired, thanks, I guess there's no edit feature here to go back and change it.
Jay
Here are a couple of images of a Copper's Hawk eating a Starling.
Here's one I got exactly two years ago today. It was worth getting there as the sun was coming up
I like the second one. You did it very well. If vignetting is done right, you should not notice it.
A professional does not back-off, suck it up, or bend over when there has been a material breach of contract.
gsugal
I heard a photographer at a convention many years ago, say - I agree - "that you bend over backwards for your customer, but you don't bend over forwards"
I agree with the others. 1. way to busy, 2. not enough interest.3. Is very good, but hard to tell if it's great with this quality.
I really like the 1st and 3rd. The 2nd doesn't look believable.
I left out a number in the price, sorry, still interested? You knew that couldn't be right?
Maybe you're right. The bird just doesn't belong. I like birds, but it competes for the attention.
It's a great lens, but it was the first one they came out with, without the vibration control. I'd like to get $425 for it.
Would I want it? No, but the only thing that matters is does she like it. If that's her personality, and she likes it, that is all that matters.
Here's a corny senior image, but she loved it. (That's her ring that sh's sitting on)
I don't have a picture of it, or have it anymore, but my first wedding , I shot with a Mamiya C330 Twin lens camera. That was about 1974.