Arthur Morris/BIRDS AS ART
August 13th, 2024

Sometimes, I am Just Plain Lazy: 70-200mm Versatility, a Quasi-Jiggle Blur, and Captivated by a Beach Plant

What’s Up?

Please remember that the blog is designed to be interactive, to make you think, to help you become a better photographer, to inspire you, and to help you to develop both your eye for image design and your creativity. Toward that end, while considering the fact that this blog post took more than two hours to create, please consider taking a minute or two to comment on the images or to answer the image design question below.

Your Call?

Which of today’s three featured images is your favorite? Please leave a comment and let us know why you make your choice?

What’s Up?

Photography at Nickerson Beach continues to be both challenging and productive. On Monday morning, I took the 600 and a tripod into the field for the first time in about ten days. I’d been doing most of my work with the 300mm f/2.8, either TC, and either camera body (the a-1 or the a9 iii).

Today is Tuesday 13 August 2024. I will again be heading out early to deal with allegedly clear skies and a SW wind, a very challenging situation. I hope that you too opt to have a great day. The afternoon weather looks perfect for my afternoon session with repeat private session client Marc Wortsman.

Please remember to use the B&H links that are found on most blog pages and to use the BIRDSASART discount code at checkout when purchasing your new gear from Bedfords to get 3% back on your credit card and enjoy free second-day air FedEx. Please, also, consider joining a BAA IPT. You will be amazed at how much you will learn!

If an item — a Delkin flash card, or a tripod head — for example, that is available from B&H and/or Bedfords, is also available in the BAA Online Store, it would be great, and greatly appreciated, if you would opt to purchase from us. We will match any price. Please remember also to use my B&H affiliate links or to earn 3% cash back at Bedfords by using the BIRDSASART discount code at checkout for your major gear purchases. Doing either often earns you free guides and/or discounts. And always earns my great appreciation.

Supporting My Efforts Here

If you enjoy and learn from the blog, please consider using one of my affiliate links when purchasing new gear. It will never cost you a single penny. To support my effort here, please order from B&H by beginning your search here. Or, click here, to order from Bedfords and enter the discount code BIRDSASART at checkout to receive 3% cash back to your credit card and enjoy free Second-Day Air Fed-Ex shipping. It is always best to write for advice via e-mail.

In many cases, I can help you save some serious dollars. And/or prevent you from purchasing the wrong gear.

Save 15%!

If you’d like to try out a new lens or if you need a lens for a specific trip or project (or for an IPT), LensRentals.com is the only way to go. To save 15%, simply click on the logo link above, arrange for your rental, and type in BIRDSASART15. If you type the gear you are looking for in the search box, it will pop right up. LensRentals.com offers affordable insurance. You can decline it, opt for LensCap: Damage Only, or select LensCap: Damage & Theft. Then hit PROCEED TO CHECKOUT. After you enter all of your info but before completing your order, be sure to scroll down to Promo Code box and enter the BIRDSASART15 code to save 15%.

I checked on renting a Sony FE 70-200mm f/2.8 GM OSS II lens for a week. The cost is only $122.00. LensCap: Damage Only coverage can be added for a very low $18.00. Going with LensCap: Damage & Theft would be $27.00. The shipping charge varies. They offer an interesting program called Lensrentals HD. By signing up for this shipping discount program ($99.00/year), you’ll get free Standard Shipping on all the orders you place.

Renting a Sony 600mm f/4 GM OSS lens for a week will cost you $536.00. The two coverage options come in at $76.00 or $114.00. Less your 15% discount when you enter the BIRDSASART15 code into the Promo Code box at checkout and enter the BIRDSASART15 code in the Promo Code box at checkout to save 15%.

Remember, to save the 15% on your rental you must start your search by clicking on the logo above, or on this link: LensRentals.com



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Bedfords Amazing BAA Discount Policy

Folks who have fallen in love with Bedfords can now use the BIRDSASART coupon code at checkout to enjoy a post-purchase, 3% off-statement credit (excluding taxes and shipping charges) on orders paid with a credit card. The 3% credit will be refunded to the card you used for your purchase. Be sure, also, to check the box for free shipping to enjoy free Second Day Air Fed-Ex. This offer does not apply to purchases of Classes, Gift Cards, prior purchases.

Visit the Bedfords website here, shoot Steve Elkins an e-mail, or text him on his cell phone at (479) 381-2592.

Gear Questions and Advice

Too many folks attending BAA IPTs and dozens of photographers whom I see in the field and on BPN, are — out of ignorance — using the wrong gear, especially when it comes to tripods and more especially, tripod heads. And the same is true in spades when ordering new camera bodies or lenses. My advice will often stave you some serious money and may help you avoid making a seriously bad choice. Please know that I am always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail. If you are desperate, you can try me on my cell at 863-221-2372. Please leave a message and shoot me a text if I do not pick up.

This image was created on 7 August 2024 at Nickerson Beach Park, Lido Beach, Long Island, NY. While crouching a bit on the beach below the berm, I used the handheld Sony FE 70-200mm f/2.8 GM OSS II lens with the Sony FE 2x teleconverter (at 400mm), and The One, the Sony Alpha 1 Mirrorless Digital Camera.. The exposure was determined via Zebras with Exposure Compensation on the Thumb Dial. Multi metering +1.3 stops. AUTO ISO set ISO 3200: 1/60 sec. at f/5.6 (wide open) in Shutter Priority mode. AWB at 6:20:51am on a totally cloudy morning.

Tracking: Expand Spot AF/C with Bird-Eye/Face Detection performed perfectly. Click on the image to enjoy a high-res version.

Image #1: Black Skimmer with baitfish for chick

Sometimes, I am Just Plain Lazy …

The morning of August 7th dawned dark and dreary and I was feeling a bit lazy as I exited my SUV in the parking lot. So, not planning on having a great morning, I grabbed the a1, the 70-200 f/2.8 II, and both TCs. Hoping for some spectacular blastoffs, I set up in Shutter Priority mode. But the skimmers had other thoughts. So I looked to the north at the birds on the beach with the berm serving as sort of a hide for me and was able to get fairly close to this skimmer without bugging it.. I had only to crouch a bit to get eye level with the birds. I created about a dozen images before it flew off in search of its chick. Working at 400mm, I had chosen the borderline shutter speed of 1/60 second; only two were sharp.

This image was also created on 7 August 2024 at Nickerson Beach Park, Lido Beach, Long Island, NY. Seated on damp sand, I employed the knee-pod technique with the handheld Sony FE 70-200mm f/2.8 GM OSS II lens with the Sony FE 2x teleconverter (at 308mm), and The One, the Sony Alpha 1 Mirrorless Digital Camera.. The exposure was determined via Zebras with Exposure Compensation on the Thumb Dial. Multi metering +2.3 stops. AUTO ISO set ISO 800: 1/13 sec. at f/5.6 (wide open) in Shutter Priority mode. AWB at 6:23:30am on a totally cloudy morning.

Tracking: Expand Spot AF/C with Bird-Eye/Face Detection performed perfectly. Click on the image to enjoy a high-res version.

Image #2: American Oystercatcher in surf

A Quasi Jiggle Blur

When handholding at 500mm with a very slow shutter speed, like 1/13 second, it is virtually impossible to create sharp images (unless the lens is firmly supported as it would be by placing the lens hood on the ground with your left hand on the ground beneath the camera body — I made some neat images with blurred wave backgrounds recently using this technique at 1/15 second and will share one or two of them with you here soon.)

Back to the oystercatcher blur — as I could not keep the lens perfectly still for this image, I got the effect of a jiggle blur, usually created by a slight circular shaking of the lens. In any case, I like the result but for the double eye in the original. So, I did some neat Eye Doctor work with the Clone Stamp Tool and a series of small Quick Masks each resized and Warped and then refined by the addition of a Regular Layer Mask. That after easily removing a young oystercatcher that had been standing next to the adult. You can see the original in the new YouTube video that was featured here in the last blog post.

I love the streamlined swoosh-shape of the re-crafted eye as it seems to suggest speed and forward motion.

A Guide to Pleasing Blurs

Learn everything there is to know about creating pleasingly blurred images in A Guide to Pleasing Blurs by Denise Ippolito and yours truly. This 20,585 word, 271 page PDF is illustrated with 144 different, exciting, and artistic images. The guide covers the basics of creating pleasingly blurred images, the factors that influence the degree of blurring, the use of filters in creating pleasing blurs, and a great variety of both in-the-field and Photoshop techniques that can be used to create pleasingly blurred images.

Artie and Denise teach you many different ways to move your lens during the exposure to create a variety of pleasingly blurred images of flowers and trees and water and landscapes. They will teach you to recognize situations where subject movement can be used to your advantage to create pan blurs, wind blurs, and moving water blurs. They will teach you to create zoom-blurs both in the field and during post-processing. Artie shares the techniques that he has used and developed for making blurred images of flocks of geese in flight at his beloved Bosque del Apache and Denise shares her flower blur magic as well as a variety of creative Photoshop techniques that she has developed.

With the advent of digital capture creating blurred images has become a great and inexpensive way to go out with your camera and have fun. And while many folks think that making successful blurred images is the result of being a sloppy photographer, nothing could be further from the truth. In “A Guide to Pleasing Blurs” Artie and Denise will help you to unleash your creative self.

This image was also created on 7 August 2024 at Nickerson Beach Park, Lido Beach, Long Island, NY. Standing at full height, I used the handheld Sony FE 70-200mm f/2.8 GM OSS II lens (at 200mm), and The One, the Sony Alpha 1 Mirrorless Digital Camera.. The exposure was determined via Zebras with ISO on the Thumb Dial. ISO 1250: 1/80 sec. at f/5.6 (stopped down two stops) in Manual mode. AWB at 7:25:56am on a then cloudy morning.

Tracking: Expand Spot AF/C with Bird-Eye/Face Detection performed perfectly. Click on the image to enjoy a high-res version.

Image #3: Euphorbia polygonifolia

Captivated by a Low Growing Plant

I had been looking at this specific plant for more than a week before I created the successful image above. I loved the oval shape and the soft vibrant colors. I first photographed it with my iPhone 15; I optimized the raw file but the resulting image simply did not cut it. On my lazy 7 August morning, as I headed back to my car early, I made it a point to swing by the tiny (about 5 inches in width) sandmat plant. The soft light was perfect. With its fabulous close focus, the amazingly versatile 70-200mm lens at 200mm turned out to be the very best tool for the job. Note that I needed ISO 1250 to get to +2 stops of light on the analogue scale and that I stopped down two full stops from f/2.8 to f/5.6 to provide enough depth-of field to cover the leaves and the stems.

As you saw or can see in the above-mentioned video, the original for this image looked dull and washed out as it should have been. The relatively new Luminance Targeted Adjustment Tool allowed me to easily juice up the colors to taste in a matter of moments.

An Image Design Question

Does the centered image design for this oval-shaped subject work for you or would you have preferred a more angular approach by rotating the plant or a different crop?

Euphorbia Polygonifolia

Euphorbia polygonifolia, known by the common names of seaside sandmat and seaside spurge, is a member of the spurge family, Euphorbiaceae. It is an annual herb, native to the east coast of the United States where it grows on coastal sand dunes of the Atlantic Ocean as well as along the shores of the Great Lakes. This plant is potentially threatened by development, coastal erosion, recreational activities, invasive species, and succession. Contact with the latex of seaside sandmat can cause poison ivy-like symptoms.

Typos

With all blog posts, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors.

August 11th, 2024

Seventeen Neat Nickerson Beach Before and After Images

What’s Up?

I am between extended IPTs without any clients. The Killing Shoreline is once again open for business on Saturday morning. Pretty much in the dark, I saw a Great Black-backed Gull approach, kill, and rip apart a surf-weakened Black Skimmer fledging — see the two ISO 12800 images at the end of the video. Later in the morning I saw two other young skimmers meet their demise.

I always root for the predators and I always let nature take its course (except when humanity is the immediate cause of a bird’s problems).

Saturday afternoon was fantastic with afternoon sun and a nice wind from the SW that had dozens of young skimmers flying right at me while practicing skimming. The only thing that they were catching was seaweed.

Sunday morning was strange. It began cloudy very dark with practically no wind at all and would up mixed sun and clouds with a northeast wind. I worked very hard without much payoff. Maybe I will find one great one …

Nope. Just finished editing and breakfast. Breakfast was the clear winner.

Seventeen Before and After Nickerson Beach Images

Check out 17 raw files, hear my plans for improving them in Photoshop, and then compare the originals with the optimized files. Some of the changes are minor, some fairly astounding. Learn a lot about how and what I see in the field and what I can do on my laptop.

If you like what you saw, you will want to check out the Digital Basics II PDF here and the The Digital Basics III Video Series here. Details below.

The BIRDS AS ART Current Workflow e-Guide (Digital Basics II).

You can order your copy from the BAA Online Store here, by sending a PayPal for $40 here, or by calling Jim or Jennifer weekdays at 863-692-0906 with your credit card in hand. Be sure to specify Digital Basics II.

The BIRDS AS ART Current Workflow e-Guide (Digital Basics II)

The techniques mentioned above and tons more great Photoshop tips and techniques — along with my complete digital workflow, Digital Eye Doctor Techniques, and all my personalized Keyboard Shortcuts — are covered in detail in the BIRDS AS ART Current Workflow e-Guide (Digital Basics II), an instructional PDF that is sent via e-mail. Note: folks working on a PC and/or those who do not want to miss anything Photoshop may wish to purchase the original Digital Basics along with DB II while saving $15 by clicking here to buy the DB Bundle.

Please note: the Divide and Conquer technique was inadvertently omitted from DB II. It is detailed in a free excerpt in the blog post here.

Folks who learn well by following along rather than by reading can check out the complete collection of MP 4 Photoshop Tutorial Videos by clicking here. Note: most of the videos are now priced at an amazingly low $5.00 each.

You can learn how and why I converted all of my Canon digital RAW files in DPP 4 in the DPP 4 RAW Conversion Guide here. More recently, I became proficient at converting my Nikon RAW (NEF) files in Adobe Camera Raw. About three years ago I began converting my Nikon and Sony RAW files in Capture One and did that for two years. You can learn more about Capture One in the Capture One Pro 12 Simplified MP4 Video here. The next step would be to get a copy of Arash Hazeghi’s “The Nikon Photographers’ Guide to Phase One Capture One Pro e-Guide” in the blog post here. Today, I convert my Sony raw files in Photoshop with Adobe Camera Raw.

You can learn advanced Quick Masking and advanced Layer Masking techniques in APTATS I & II. You can save $15 by purchasing the pair.

The Digital Basics III Video Series

The Digital Basics III Video Series

I realized about a year ago that my digital workflow had changed significantly and was toying with the idea of writing a Digital Basics III. More recently, I learned and begun working with two great new Photoshop Tools, the Remove Tool and the Luminance Targeted Adjustment Tool. The former is like a smarter Spot Healing Brush Tool on steroids and the latter is a step up from the fabulous Color Mixer Tool. During that same time frame, I came up with a new and improved 2-step noise reduction technique. I still use Divide and Conquer, Quick Masks, Layer Masks, an expanded array of personalized keyboard shortcuts, and tons of other stuff from both versions of Digital Basics.

As soon as I realized that I did not want to take on another large writing project, I realized that by creating a series of videos I could much more easily share all the details of my current digital workflow and much more easily incorporate additional new tips, techniques, and tools as I went. And so, The Digital Basics III Video Series was born.

Order the first five videos in Volume I by clicking here. The videos will be most valuable for folks using the latest version of Photoshop (2024) or Lightroom along with Topaz DeNoise AI and Topaz Sharpen AI.

Typos

With all blog posts, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors.

August 9th, 2024

A Distressed Black Skimmer Chick Story in Four Pictures

What’s Up?

The forecast on Tuesday for Lido Beach was for rain all day on Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. Other than a light mist here and there, it did not rain at all on Wednesday or Thursday. I went out early on Wednesday morning, made some nice blurs, photographed a lovely beach plant, and had an encounter with the week-old skimmer chick that is featured in today’s post.

On Wednesday afternoon I wanted to treat Pat Fishburne to a nice thank you lunch at Wild Ginger in Rockville Center but she kindly insisted on treating me instead. Then I drove her to an airport hotel for her early Thursday morning JFK to Fort Myers flight. I will be sharing some of her amazing images with y’all here soon.

Today is Friday 9 August 2024. The forecast is again calling for rain all day. My plan is to head to the beach early unless it is pouring.

Whatever you are doing, I hope that you have fun too.

Note the versatility of the 70-200 lens in Images #1 and #2. I will be sharing other images made that morning in a future blog post.

70-200mm f/2.8 Minimum Focusing Distance (MFD) Tip

In most systems, the 70-200mm f/2.8 lenses offer excellent MFDs.The MFDs vary as you zoom in and out; the longer the focal length the closer you can focus.

When you can get really, really close to your subject, you need to pay attention to make sure that you are not too close to focus. Working in Continuous AF, make sure that focus has been attained by watching the AF point or points in the viewfinder. If they stabilize where you want them to, the bird’s eye for example, you are good to go. If they continue to dance around, you are too close and need to move back at least a few inches.

On occasion, I have created long series of image only to find out on the laptop that none were sharp. Why? I had been too close and not paying attention to the details.

Your Call?

1- What happened with the skimmer chick that morning?

2- Do you think that the chick will survive?

This image was created on 7 August 2024 at Nickerson Beach, Long Island, NY. Seated on damp sand, I used the hand held Sony FE 70-200mm f/2.8 GM OSS II lens (at 200mm) and The One, the Sony Alpha 1 Mirrorless Digital Camera.. The exposure was determined via Zebras with Exposure Compensation on the thumb dial. Multi Metering + 2 1/3 stops in S (Shutter Priority) mode. AUTO ISO set ISO 2500. 1/125 sec. at f/2.8 (wide open). AWB at 6:48:31am on a totally overcast, threatening to rain morning.

Tracking: Expand Spot S AF/C with Bird-Eye/Face Detection performed perfectly. Click on the image to enjoy a high-res version.

Image #1: Black Skimmer, weak, exhausted chick about one week old

This image was also created on 7 August 2024 at Nickerson Beach, Long Island, NY. Now lying on the damp sand, I used the hand held Sony FE 70-200mm f/2.8 GM OSS II lens (this time zoomed out to 80mm) and The One, the Sony Alpha 1 Mirrorless Digital Camera.. The exposure was determined via Zebras with Exposure Compensation on the thumb dial. Multi Metering + 2 stops in S (Shutter Priority) mode. AUTO ISO set ISO 1600. 1/125 sec. at f/2.8 (wide open). AWB at 6:48:59am on a totally overcast, threatening to rain morning. I activated the in-viewfinder level as I was in quite an awkward position.

Tracking: Expand Spot S AF/C with Bird-Eye/Face Detection performed perfectly. Click on the image to enjoy a high-res version.

Image #2: Black Skimmer, weak, exhausted chick about one week old facing a big challenge

The raw file for this image, also created on 7 August 2024 at Nickerson Beach, Long Island, NY, was made with the iPhone 15.

Image #3: Black Skimmer, weak, exhausted chick about one week old in my hand

The raw file for this image, also created on 7 August 2024 at Nickerson Beach, Long Island, NY, was made with the iPhone 15.

Image #4: Left of the bottom of the sign post, note the weak, exhausted skimmer chick in a scrape inside the colony ropes

Typos

All questions and comments are welcome. With all blog posts, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors.