Arthur Morris/BIRDS AS ART
October 30th, 2016

Who Is He?

Gear Questions and Advice

Too many folks attending IPTs and dozens of the folks 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… Please know that I am always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

Gear Questions and Advice

Too many folks attending IPTs and dozens of the folks 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… Please know that I am always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.


The Streak: 352!

Today’s blog post marks a totally insane, irrational, illogical, preposterous, absurd, completely ridiculous, unfathomable, silly, incomprehensible, what’s wrong with this guy?, makes-no-sense, 352 days in a row with a new educational blog post. There should be no end in sight until my big South America trip next fall. Or not… As always-–and folks have been doing a really great job recently–-please remember to use our B&H links for your major gear purchases. For best results use one of our many product-specific links; after clicking on one of those you can continue shopping with all subsequent purchases invisibly tracked to BAA. Your doing so is always greatly appreciated. Please remember: web orders only. And please remember also that if you are shopping for items that we carry in the new BAA Online Store (as noted in red at the close of this post below) we would appreciate your business.


arash-hazeghi-_y9c5135

This image was created at Alafia Banks with the hand held original Canon 100-400L IS zoom lens, the “old 1-4,”, now replaced by the Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM lens (at 380mm) and my old workhorse body, the EOS-1D Mark IV (now replaced by the high ISO king, the rugged, blazingly fast Canon EOS-1D X Mark II DSLR with 64GB Card and Reader). ISO 400. Evaluative metering at zero: 1/1250 sec. at f/8.

Arash Hazeghi hand holding the old 500mm at Alafia Banks in 2010

Arash Hazeghi: Who Is He?

After reading the EOS-1DX Mark II Field Review with Eight Great Images… guest blog post here and seeing Arash’s amazing birds in flight images, many folks wanted to learn more about him. It took me a while to get him to send his short bio, but here it is, amended as usual by yours’ truly. 🙂

Arash Hazeghi, Ph.D. is an electron device engineer. He received his MS.c. and Ph.D. degrees in Electrical Engineering in 2006 and 2011 from Stanford University, Stanford, California. His pioneering research on Carbon Nanotubes and quantum capacitance have been cited many times. He is currently focused on the development of cutting edge non-volatile memory technologies such as the ones used in imaging cards for DSLR cameras.

In his free time, Arash enjoys photographing avian species in their natural habitats and in flight, the latter most challenging subjects. For many years he has been working on handhold super-telephoto technique to capture dynamic, highly-detailed in-flight images of many different avian species. His images of birds in flight–featured numerous times on the web, in printed media, as well as in prestigious museums and art galleries–have inspired many photographers. Arash’s work was recently on display at the San Diego Natural History Museum for a period of 8 months. His work has also been featured many times in the annual publications of NANPA.

He is an Avian Moderator on BirdPhotographers.Net and a premier photographer at 500px.com. He is the primary co-author of the Canon DPP 4 RAW Conversion Guide and the Professional Post Processing Guide , both with Arthur Morris. These guides detail RAW conversion and post processing techniques for both professional and the enthusiast photographers. Both guides are a result of extensive in-the-field flight photography with various Canon gear and lots of time spent at the computer. Both Arash and artie convert all of their images in Canon’s Digital Photo Professional 4 and use NeatImage for noise reduction.


arash-grhe

This image was created by Arash Hazeghi at Bolsa Chica wetlands with the hand held Canon EF 400mm f/4 DO IS II USM lens, the Canon Extender EF 2X III, and the Canon EOS-1D X Mark II with 64GB Card and Reader. ISO 3200. 1/2500 sec. at f/8.

artie note: Most folks do not have a single flight image of this speedy species; Arash has several excellent ones…

Green Heron in flight.
Courtesy of and copyright 2016: Arash Hazeghi

Growing as a Person on BPN

Arash has been a moderator in the Avian Forum at BirdPhotographer’s.Net (honest critiques done gently; it ain;t just birds!) for about four years. The Avian Forum is the best place on the planet to learn to improve your bird photography online. Both members and moderators work very hard to avoid BPN becoming just another “great shot” forum where everything is about how many positive comments you can get from your long list of friends. At BPN we strive to–as noted above–do honest critiques gently.

Before Arash became a mod he was a valuable member of the BPN community, but for many, he was often a bit too honest. Others said overly opinionated, conceited, obnoxious, arrogant, and even nasty. He would often become involved in piss-fights, endless arguments where both sides exhibit less than good manners. But his comments, for those who did not take them personally, were always constructive. In short he reminded me a lot of myself a decade ago. Only I was a lot worse! And like me to this day, he does not suffer fools lightly.

But I saw his potential. After long discussions via Skype and e-mail with BPN co-owner Peter Kes, I convinced Peter that we should offer Arash a position as an Avian Moderator. I invited Peter to send me problematic comments made by Arash. He did. In some cases I would say, “Arash is right. He could be a bit more gentle, but he is right.” In other cases I would say, “Yup. He is out of bounds on that one.” I would call Arash and we would discuss things. I would share with him the things that I had learned over the years about simply being nicer while getting your point across.

Today Arash is one of the very best mods around; he is extremely helpful while remaining kind and gentle. He is greatly respected in various BPN Forums not, just for his photographic skills, but for the great work he has done as a Mod. I am quite proud of his growth and development. And best of all, even Peter Kes now agrees that Arash is a great asset to BPN.


arashsqportrait

Arash
Image courtesy and copyright Aryan Hazeghi.

BTW…

When I e-mailed Arash telling him that folks were curious as to whether he worked out he replied:

Ha ha. Yes I do workout and lift weights: dead lifts (140 lbs); chest presses (140 lbs); lat pull downs (110 lbs); curls (50-60 lbs) and squats. I am only 5’8” and 145 lbs; hand holding doesn’t have as much to do with size and bulk as most folks assume… He he.

Arash asked me to stress that it is not the amount of weight being lifted that is most important, but rather using correct form.

Please Remember to use my Affiliate Links and to Visit the New BAA Online Store 🙂

To show your appreciation for my continuing efforts here, we ask, as always, that you get in the habit of using my B&H affiliate links on the right side of the blog for all of your photo and electronics purchases. Please check the availability of all photographic accessories in the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store, especially the Mongoose M3.6 tripod head, Wimberley lens plates, Delkin flash cards and accessories, and LensCoat stuff.

As always, we sell only what I have used, have tested, and can depend on. We will not sell you junk. We know what you need to make creating great images easy and fun. And we are always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

I would of course appreciate your using our B&H affiliate links for all of your major gear, video, and electronic purchases. For the photographic stuff mentioned in the paragraph above we, and for everything else in the new store, we, meaning BAA, would of course greatly appreciate your business. Here is a huge thank you to the many who have been using our links on a regular basis and those who will be visiting the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store as well.

Facebook

Be sure to like and follow BAA on Facebook by clicking on the logo link upper right. Tanks a stack!

Typos

In all blog posts and Bulletins, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors. Just be right 🙂

October 29th, 2016

What's Your Take? Gull/Baby Puffin Predation? Extensive Clean-up or Not Quite Enough? Digital Eye Doctor Special

Gear Questions and Advice

Too many folks attending IPTs and dozens of the folks 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… Please know that I am always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

Gear Questions and Advice

Too many folks attending IPTs and dozens of the folks 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… Please know that I am always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.


The Streak: 351!

Today’s blog post marks a totally insane, irrational, illogical, preposterous, absurd, completely ridiculous, unfathomable, silly, incomprehensible, what’s wrong with this guy?, makes-no-sense, 351 days in a row with a new educational blog post. There should be no end in sight until my big South America trip next fall. Or not… As always-–and folks have been doing a really great job recently–-please remember to use our B&H links for your major gear purchases. For best results use one of our many product-specific links; after clicking on one of those you can continue shopping with all subsequent purchases invisibly tracked to BAA. Your doing so is always greatly appreciated. Please remember: web orders only. And please remember also that if you are shopping for items that we carry in the new BAA Online Store (as noted in red at the close of this post below) we would appreciate your business.


lesser-black-backed-gull-eating-baby-puffin-_a0i0054-seahouses-uk

This image was created on the 2016 UK Puffins and Gannets IPT with the hand held Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM lens, the Canon Extender EF 1.4X III (at 348mm) with the rugged, blazingly fast Canon EOS-1D X Mark II DSLR with 64GB Card and Reader. ISO 2500. Evaluative metering at zero: 1/1600 sec. at f/9. AWB.

Center AF point/AI Servo Expand/Rear Focus AF as framed was active at the moment of exposure (as is always best when hand holding). The selected AF point was on the gull’s breast well below and a bit behind the eye. Click here to see the latest version of the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to see a larger version.

Lesser Black-backed Gull scavenging Atlantic Puffin chick

Gull Predation?

When I first saw this gull pick up the puffin chick I called out to the half of the group that was within earshot. I am not sure why but nobody who heard me came. Perhaps they were having too much fun photographing the incoming puffins in flight or perhaps they did not want to photograph gruesome. Heck, I love gruesome; predators gotta eat too.

Though the large gull species will kill any puffin chick that wanders out of its burrow and have been known to grab a baby puffin that was peeking out of its burrow by the head and kill it, I believe that what I photographed that morning was likely engaged in scavenging behavior rather than predation. Why? The puffin chick looked quite well dead when I saw the gull simply pick it up off the rock. There was no struggle.

What’s Your Take on Photographing Predation?

What’s your take on photographing predation? Is it something that gets you excited or do you turn away? Either way, please let us know why you feel the way you do.

Extensive Clean-up or Not Quite Enough?

The image clean-up that you see in the animated GIF above took me about 45 minutes. I am quite proud of the improvement. For those who would say that the rocks without the gull whitewash look unnatural I would respond by pointing out that that is exactly how they would look an hour after a good rain. I use my usual clean-up tools, the Patch Tool, the Spot Healing Brush, a bit of the Clone Stamp Tool, and several small Quick Masks refined by Regular Layer masks. Learn advanced Quick Masking and advanced Layer Masking techniques in APTATS I & II. You can save $15 by purchasing the pair. Learn about using all of my clean-up tools and tons more in my Digital Basics File. See below for more on that.

The question is, would you have eliminated the tiny gull feather from the crack in the rock below the rear half of the gull? Why or why not?

Digital Eye Doctor Special

The feathering on the gull’s face above and in front of its eye was pretty much a mess. In all, it was as much Digital Face Doctor as it was Digital Eye Doctor. For the clean-up of the feather’s on the face, I used the Clone Stamp Tool at reduced opacities varying from 50-80%. I also used the Clone Stamp Tool for much of the work involved in rebuilding the eye skin. I used Tim Grey Dodge and Burn to lighten the iris and the red eye skin and to darken the pupil.

Everything above is detailed in my Digital Basics File, an instructional PDF that is sent via e-mail. It includes my complete digital workflow, dozens of great Photoshop tips, details on using all of my image clean-up tools, the use of Contrast Masks, several different ways of expanding and filling in canvas, all of my time-saving Keyboard Shortcuts, the basics of Quick Masking, Layer Masking, and NIK Color Efex Pro, Digital Eye Doctor techniques, using Gaussian Blurs, Dodge and Burn, a variety of ways to make selections, how to create time-saving actions, and tons more.

Learn about NeatImage for noise reduction in The Professional Guide to Post-Processing.


uk-puffins-card-ii-layers

Images and card design copyright: Arthur Morris/BIRDS AS ART. Click on the card to enjoy a spectacular larger version.

2017 UK Puffins and Gannets IPT
Monday July 3 through Monday July 10, 2017: $5999: Limit 10 photographers — Openings: 6). Two great leaders: Arthur Morris and BPN co-owner, BPN Photography Gear Forum Moderator, and long-time BAA Webmaster Peter Kes.

Here are the plans: take a red eye from the east coast of the US on July 2 and arrive in Edinburgh, Scotland on the morning of Monday July 3 no later than 10am (or simply meet us then at the Edinburgh Airport–EDI, or later in the day at our cottages if you are driving your own vehicle either from the UK or from somewhere in Europe). Stay 7 nights in one of three gorgeous modern country cottages.

There are five days of planned puffin/seabird trips and one morning of gannet photography, all weather permitting of course. In three years we have yet to miss an entire day because of weather… In addition, we will enjoy several sessions of photographing nesting Black-legged Kittiwakes at eye level.


uk-puffins-card-iii-layers

Images and card design copyright: Arthur Morris/BIRDS AS ART. Click on the card to enjoy a spectacular larger version.

The Details

We will get to photograph Atlantic Puffin, Common Murre, Razorbill, Shag, and Northern Gannet; Arctic, Sandwich, and Common Terns, the former with chicks of all sizes; Black-headed, Lesser-Black-backed, and Herring Gulls, many chasing puffins with fish; Black-legged Kittiwake with chicks. We will be staying in upscale country-side lodging that are beyond lovely with large living areas and lots of open space for the informal image sharing and Photoshop sessions. The shared rooms are decent-sized, each with a private bathroom. See the limited single supplement info below.

All breakfasts, lunches and dinners are included. All 5 puffins boat lunches will need to be prepared by you in advance, taken with, and consumed at your leisure. I usually eat mine on the short boat trip from one island to the other. Also included is a restaurant lunch on the gannet boat day.

If you wish to fly home on the morning of Monday July 10 we will get you to the airport. Please, however, consider the following tentative plans: enjoy a second Gannet boat trip on the afternoon of Monday July 10 and book your hotel room in Dunbar. If all goes as planned, those who stay on for the two extra days will make a morning landing at Bass Rock, one of the world’s largest gannetries. We will get everyone to the airport on the morning of Wednesday July 12. (We may opt to stay in Edinburgh on the night of July 11.) Price and details should be finalized at least six months before the trip but you will need to be a bit patient. It would be ideal if I can get all the work done by the end of September so that folks can arrange their flights then.


uk-puffins-card-i

Images and card design copyright: Arthur Morris/BIRDS AS ART. Click on the card to enjoy a spectacular larger version. Scroll down to join us in the UK in 2016.

Deposit Info

If you are good to go sharing a room–couples of course are more than welcome–please send your non-refundable $2,000/person deposit check now to save a spot. Please be sure to check your schedule carefully before committing to the trip and see the travel insurance info below. Your balance will be due on March 29, 2017. Please make your check out to “Arthur Morris” and send it to Arthur Morris/BIRDS AS ART, PO Box 7245, Indian Lake Estates, FL, 33855. If we do not receive your check for the balance on or before the due date we will try to fill your spot from the waiting list. If your spot is filled, you will lose your deposit. If not, you can secure your spot by paying your balance.

Please shoot me an e-mail if you are good to go or if you have any questions.

Single Supplement Deposit Info

Single supplement rooms are available on a limited basis. To ensure yours, please register early. The single supplement fee is $1575. If you would like your own room, please request it when making your deposit and include payment in full for the single supplement; your single supplement deposit check should be for $3,575. As we will need to commit to renting the extra space, single supplement deposits are non-refundable so please be sure that check your schedule carefully before committing to the trip and see the travel insurance info below.

Travel Insurance

Travel insurance for big international trips is highly recommended as we never know what life has in store for us. I strongly recommend that you purchase quality insurance. Travel Insurance Services offers a variety of plans and options. Included with the Elite Option or available as an upgrade to the Basic & Plus Options you can also purchase Cancel for Any Reason Coverage that expands the list of reasons for your canceling to include things such as sudden work or family obligation and even a simple change of mind. My family and I use and depend on the great policies offered by TIS whenever we travel. You can learn more here: Travel Insurance Services. Do note that many plans require that you purchase your travel insurance within 14 days of our cashing your deposit check of running your credit card. Whenever purchasing travel insurance be sure to read the fine print careful even when dealing with reputable firms like TSI.

Please Remember to use my Affiliate Links and to Visit the New BAA Online Store 🙂

To show your appreciation for my continuing efforts here, we ask, as always, that you get in the habit of using my B&H affiliate links on the right side of the blog for all of your photo and electronics purchases. Please check the availability of all photographic accessories in the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store, especially the Mongoose M3.6 tripod head, Wimberley lens plates, Delkin flash cards and accessories, and LensCoat stuff.

As always, we sell only what I have used, have tested, and can depend on. We will not sell you junk. We know what you need to make creating great images easy and fun. And we are always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

I would of course appreciate your using our B&H affiliate links for all of your major gear, video, and electronic purchases. For the photographic stuff mentioned in the paragraph above we, and for everything else in the new store, we, meaning BAA, would of course greatly appreciate your business. Here is a huge thank you to the many who have been using our links on a regular basis and those who will be visiting the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store as well.

Facebook

Be sure to like and follow BAA on Facebook by clicking on the logo link upper right. Tanks a stack!

Typos

In all blog posts and Bulletins, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors. Just be right 🙂

October 28th, 2016

Common Bird/Rare Sight. And Saved By Surround AF

What’s Up?

I am somewhere in South America. I hope that you are well. Jim and Jen are at the office most days to help you with your mail order needs and Instructional Photo-Tour sign-ups. I still need folks for San Diego, Japan, Galapagos, the Palouse, and the Bear Boat (Grizzly Cubs) trips. Among others 🙂 Please e-mail for couples and discount info for all of the above. Click here for complete IPT info.

I will have relatively decent internet access for all but 22 OCT thru 11 NOV while I am on the Sea Spirit. Best and great picture making, artie

Please remember that the blog is intended to be interactive; the more folks who participate, the more everyone learns, including you. And me.


Gear Questions and Advice

Too many folks attending IPTs and dozens of the folks 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… Please know that I am always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

The Streak: 350!

Today’s blog post marks a totally insane, irrational, illogical, preposterous, absurd, completely ridiculous, unfathomable, silly, incomprehensible, what’s wrong with this guy?, makes-no-sense, 350 days in a row with a new educational blog post. There should be no end in sight until my big South America trip next fall. Or not… As always-–and folks have been doing a really great job recently–-please remember to use our B&H links for your major gear purchases. For best results use one of our many product-specific links; after clicking on one of those you can continue shopping with all subsequent purchases invisibly tracked to BAA. Your doing so is always greatly appreciated. Please remember: web orders only. And please remember also that if you are shopping for items that we carry in the new BAA Online Store (as noted in red at the close of this post below) we would appreciate your business.


short-billed-dowitcher-juvenile-on-mud-_a0i8941-east-pond-jamaica-bay-wr-queens-ny

This image was created on the East Pond at the Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge on my private morning with E-mac (Elizabeth MacSwann) while seated behind my Induro GIT 304L/Mongoose M3.6-mounted Canon EF 600mm f/4L IS II USM lens, the Canon Extender EF 1.4X III, and the fast, rugged Canon EOS-1D X Mark II with 64GB Card and Reader. ISO 800. Evaluative metering +1/3 stop: 1/640 sec. at f/6.3 was close to one full stop underexposed. Daylight WB.

Center AF point/AI Servo Surround/Rear Focus AF as framed was active at the moment of exposure. The selected AF point fell just missed the front of the bird’s breast; see more below. Click here to see the latest version of the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to see a larger version.

LensAlign/FocusTune micro-adjustment = 6.

Short-billed Dowitcher walking on mud

Common Bird/Rare Sight

Short-billed Dowitcher is a relatively common bird at Jamaica Bay in summer with some adults (failed breeders and females) arriving as early as late June and numbers building in a typical year to several hundred toward the end of July. By early August most of the adults have departed. The juvies, wearing their beautifully colored and patterned fresh feathers, show up right around mid-August. In a good year I used to count more than 100 juvies on the East Pond.

This species spends 99% of it time either foraging belly deep in shallow water or huddled at their high tide roosts, usually at the Raunt. To see one simply walking across a mud flat is a rare sight indeed. I had a few chances when the birds left the rain pool to my left to head for the one to my right. I was quite excited and am glad that I got one sharp decent one showing the feet and legs. Note: the bird was walking slowly when this image was created.

Tip: whenever you may wind up photographing birds that are walking or flying from side to side, take the time to level the tripod platform by centering the floating bubble in the scribed circle. Do this by adjusting the length of the individual legs or in this case, by shoving one or the other leg firmly into the mud. Be sure to leave the bottom leg section out about 3-4 inches to avoid getting mud or sand into the lowest leg lock. It takes a bit of practice to figure out which leg needs to be adjusted to level the platform but after a while you will be able to get it done quickly.

Image Design Question

If I had been lying flat down on the mud, how would that have greatly improved this image?


dpp4-sbdo

DPP 4 Screen Capture

Saved By Surround

Note that the selected AF point totally missed the bird’s breast. That means that one or more assist points to our left of the center AF point successfully tracked the subject. Note also the nice RGB values of 230, 230, 233 with the cursor on the white eyeline. This represents the RAW file after it was brightened in DPP 4. (The program remembers the recipe and adjusts the RAW file for viewing with those settings; if I need a screen capture of the original RAW without the adjustments I simply head to Photo Mechanic.)

Please Remember to use my Affiliate Links and to Visit the New BAA Online Store 🙂

To show your appreciation for my continuing efforts here, we ask, as always, that you get in the habit of using my B&H affiliate links on the right side of the blog for all of your photo and electronics purchases. Please check the availability of all photographic accessories in the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store, especially the Mongoose M3.6 tripod head, Wimberley lens plates, Delkin flash cards and accessories, and LensCoat stuff.

As always, we sell only what I have used, have tested, and can depend on. We will not sell you junk. We know what you need to make creating great images easy and fun. And we are always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

I would of course appreciate your using our B&H affiliate links for all of your major gear, video, and electronic purchases. For the photographic stuff mentioned in the paragraph above we, and for everything else in the new store, we, meaning BAA, would of course greatly appreciate your business. Here is a huge thank you to the many who have been using our links on a regular basis and those who will be visiting the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store as well.

Facebook

Be sure to like and follow BAA on Facebook by clicking on the logo link upper right. Tanks a stack!

Typos

In all blog posts and Bulletins, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors. Just be right 🙂

October 27th, 2016

Exposing Dangerously to the Right... And Horizontal Portrait Basics

What’s Up?

I am somewhere in South America. I hope that you are well. Jim and Jen are at the office most days to help you with your mail order needs and Instructional Photo-Tour sign-ups. I still need folks for San Diego, Japan, Galapagos, the Palouse, and the Bear Boat (Grizzly Cubs) trips. Among others 🙂 Please e-mail for couples and discount info for all of the above. Click here for complete IPT info.

I will have relatively decent internet access for all but 22 OCT thru 11 NOV while I am on the Sea Spirit. Best and great picture making, artie

Gear Questions and Advice

Too many folks attending BAA IPTs and dozens of the folks 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… Please know that I am always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.


The Streak: 349!

Today’s blog post marks a totally insane, irrational, illogical, preposterous, absurd, completely ridiculous, unfathomable, silly, incomprehensible, what’s wrong with this guy?, makes-no-sense, 349 days in a row with a new educational blog post. There should be no end in sight until my big South America trip next fall. Or not… As always-–and folks have been doing a really great job recently–-please remember to use our B&H links for your major gear purchases. For best results use one of our many product-specific links; after clicking on one of those you can continue shopping with all subsequent purchases invisibly tracked to BAA. Your doing so is always greatly appreciated. Please remember: web orders only. And please remember also that if you are shopping for items that we carry in the new BAA Online Store (as noted in red at the close of this post below) we would appreciate your business.


california-gull-adult-_y5o4557la-jolla-ca

This image was created on the 2016 San Diego IPT with the hand held Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM lens (at 263mm) with the EOS-1dX (now replaced by the rugged, blazingly fast Canon EOS-1D X Mark II. ISO 500. Evaluative metering probably +1 1/3 stops: 1/2000 sec. at f/6.3 in Manual mode resulted in a very bright RAW file… AWB.

Center AF point/AI Servo Expand/Rear Focus AF as framed was active at the moment of exposure (as is always best when hand holding). The selected AF point was on the bird’s shoulder above the bend of the wing. Click here to see the latest version of the Rear Focus Tutorial.

California Gull, adult winter

Image Question

Do the breaking waves behind the subject bother you? Why or why not?

California Gull

Despite its name, California Gull is not a particularly easy species to photograph in Southern California in winter (or at any season as far as I know). In general, they are scarcer and much more wary than the Western and incredibly beautiful Heerman’s Gulls are, and–unlike those two species–they rarely respond to tossed bread. You can, however, usually find a few at the Green Patch in La Jolla where this bird was photographed. If you move slowly and stay low, you can get close. I have even made some head portraits with a big lens and a TC.

Horizontal Portrait Basics

Note that the bird is well back in the frame with about four times as much room from the bird’s breast to the right frame edge than from the tip of the tail to the left frame edge. And not also that there is about twice as much room above the bird than below. Lastly, check out the pretty much perfect head angle. Learn tons more in the Advanced Composition and Image Design chapter in The Art of Bird Photography II (ABP II: 916 pages, 900+ images on CD only).

The San Diego Site Guide

If you would love to learn all the great spots in and around San Diego and La Jolla–including the Green Patch, get yourself a copy of the BAA San Diego Site guide here. It is the next best thing to being on an IPT.

Exposing Dangerously to the Right…

As regular readers know, I like to have the bright WHITEs in my RAW files open in DPP 4 with RGB values in the mid 230s or at worse, the low 240s. With this image, operator resulted in the brightest WHITEs with RBG values in the high 240s and low 250s. As there were no blinkies on the back of the camera or in Photo Mechanic and the DPP 4 histogram looked fine with no data piled up on the right hand axis, I knew that getting the look that I wanted would be a snap. In addition, I would need to deal with the CYAN color cast.

In DPP4 I played with the color temperature, pulled the exposure down by moving the Brightness slider well to the left, and pulled down the Highlights to -2. Then I brought the now darkened to taste image into Photoshop, did a bit of clean-up work, and worked on the color cast. I will be offering a Color Balance/Color Cast MP4 video soon.

To learn why and how Arash and I use Canon Digital Photo Professional 4 to convert all our RAW files, get yourself a copy of the DPP 4 Raw Conversion Guide.


san-diego-card-neesie

San Diego offers a wealth of very attractive natural history subjects. With annual visits spanning more than three decades I have lot of experience there….

2017 San Diego 4 1/2-DAY BIRDS AS ART Instructional Photo-Tour (IPT) JAN 11 thru and including the morning session on JAN 15: 4 1/2 days: $1999.

(Limit: 10/openings 8)

Meet and Greet at 7:00pm on the evening before the IPT begins; Tuesday 1/10/17.

Join me in San Diego to photograph the spectacular breeding plumage Brown Pelicans with their fire-engine red and olive green bill pouches; Brandt’s and Double-crested Cormorants; breeding plumage Wood and Ring-necked Duck; other duck species possible including Lesser Scaup, Redhead, and Surf Scoter; a variety of gulls including Western, California, and the gorgeous Heerman’s, all in full breeding plumage; shorebirds including Marbled Godwit, Willet, Sanderling and Black-bellied Plover; many others possible including Least, Western, and Spotted Sandpiper, Whimbrel, Black and Ruddy Turnstone, Semipalmated Plover, and Surfbird; Harbor Seals (depending on the current regulations) and California Sea Lions; and Bird of Paradise flowers. And as you can see by studying the two IPT cards there are some nice bird-scape and landscape opportunities as well.

With gorgeous subjects just sitting there waiting to have their pictures taken, photographing the pelicans on the cliffs is about as easy as nature photography gets. With the winds from the east almost every morning there is usually some excellent flight photography. And the pelicans are almost always doing something interesting: preening, scratching, bill pouch cleaning, or squabbling. And then there are those crazy head throws that are thought to be a form of intra-flock communication.

Did I mention that there are wealth of great birds and natural history subjects in San Diego in winter?


san-diego-card-b

Though the pelicans will be the stars of the show on this IPT there will be many other handsome and captivating subjects in wonderful settings.

The San Diego Details

This IPT will include five 3 1/2 hour morning photo sessions, four 2 1/2 hour afternoon photo sessions, four lunches, and after-lunch image review and Photoshop sessions. To ensure early starts, breakfasts will be your responsibility.

A $599 non-refundable deposit is required to hold your slot for this IPT. You can send a check (made out to “Arthur Morris) to us at BIRDS AS ART, PO Box 7245, Indian Lake Estates, FL, 33855. Or call Jim or Jennifer at the office with a credit card at 863-692-0906. Your balance, payable only by check, will be due on 9/11//2016. If we do not receive your check for the balance on or before the due date we will try to fill your spot from the waiting list. Please print, complete, and sign the form that is linked to here and shoot it to us along with your deposit check. If you register by phone, please print, complete and sign the form as noted above and either mail it to us or e-mail the scan. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact me via e-mail.

Please Remember to use my Affiliate Links and to Visit the New BAA Online Store 🙂

To show your appreciation for my continuing efforts here, we ask, as always, that you get in the habit of using my B&H affiliate links on the right side of the blog for all of your photo and electronics purchases. Please check the availability of all photographic accessories in the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store, especially the Mongoose M3.6 tripod head, Wimberley lens plates, Delkin flash cards and accessories, and LensCoat stuff.

As always, we sell only what I have used, have tested, and can depend on. We will not sell you junk. We know what you need to make creating great images easy and fun. And we are always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

I would of course appreciate your using our B&H affiliate links for all of your major gear, video, and electronic purchases. For the photographic stuff mentioned in the paragraph above we, and for everything else in the new store, we, meaning BAA, would of course greatly appreciate your business. Here is a huge thank you to the many who have been using our links on a regular basis and those who will be visiting the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store as well.

Facebook

Be sure to like and follow BAA on Facebook by clicking on the logo link upper right. Tanks a stack!

Typos

In all blog posts and Bulletins, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors. Just be right 🙂

October 26th, 2016

Near-Perfect In-Heaven Image Capture...

What’s Up?

I am somewhere in South America. I hope that you are well. Jim and Jen are at the office most days to help you with your mail order needs and Instructional Photo-Tour sign-ups. I still need folks for San Diego, Japan, Galapagos, the Palouse, and the Bear Boat (Grizzly Cubs) trips. Among others 🙂 Please e-mail for couples and discount info for all of the above. Click here for complete IPT info.

I will have relatively decent internet access for all but 22 OCT thru 11 NOV while I am on the Sea Spirit. Best and great picture making, artie

Please remember that the blog is intended to be interactive; the higher the number of folks who participate, the more everyone learns, including you. And me.


Gear Questions and Advice

Too many folks attending IPTs and dozens of the folks 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… Please know that I am always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

The Streak: 348!

Today’s blog post marks a totally insane, irrational, illogical, preposterous, absurd, completely ridiculous, unfathomable, silly, incomprehensible, what’s wrong with this guy?, makes-no-sense, 348 days in a row with a new educational blog post. There should be no end in sight until my big South America trip next fall. Or not… As always-–and folks have been doing a really great job recently–-please remember to use our B&H links for your major gear purchases. For best results use one of our many product-specific links; after clicking on one of those you can continue shopping with all subsequent purchases invisibly tracked to BAA. Your doing so is always greatly appreciated. Please remember: web orders only. And please remember also that if you are shopping for items that we carry in the new BAA Online Store (as noted in red at the close of this post below) we would appreciate your business.


least-sandpiper-juvenile-in-heaven-_a0i8801-east-pond-jamaica-bay-wr-queens-ny

This image was created on the East Pond at the Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge on my private morning with E-mac (Elizabeth MacSwann) while seated behind the Induro GIT 304L/Mongoose M3.6-mounted Canon EF 600mm f/4L IS II USM lens, the Canon Extender EF 2X III, and the fast, rugged Canon EOS-1D X Mark II with 64GB Card and Reader. ISO 1000. Evaluative metering +1 stop: 1/250 sec. at f/9. Daylight WB.

Three AF points to the left and two rows up from the center AF point/AI Servo Surround/Rear Focus AF as framed was active at the moment of exposure. The selected AF point fell just forward of the bird’s eye. Click here to see the latest version of the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to see a larger version.

LensAlign/FocusTune micro-adjustment = 5.

Least Sandpiper, juvenile “in heaven”

The “In-Heaven” Look

This juvie Least Sandpiper flew in and landed nearby. My eyes opened wide when I saw that he opted to rest just on the other side of the crest of a small bank that led down to the edge of a rainwater pool. I knew that by lowering my tripod just a bit that I could put the rise between us and by focusing on the bird’s face the foreground would be thrown completely out of focus and yield the shorebird in heaven look. Usually you need to be flat on the ground to execute this but the bird’s chosen spot made it easy to do while I was seated.

Image Design Questions

Would you like to see more of the legs? Why or why not? What do you think of the head angle?


dpp-4-least-in-heaven

DPP 4 Screen Capture

Near-Perfect Image Capture…

So what’s so good? Note that all three color channels are more than halfway into the fifth histogram box and that the active AF point, illuminated here in red, was nicely on the same plane as the peep’s eye. Note also the RGB values of 217, 216, 218. Those readings off the brightest parts of the bird’s breast. The foreground RGB values were in the mid-high 230s just as I prefer them.

For the image optimization I set the black point and the white point with a Levels Adjustment, applied my Nik Color EFEX Pro 25/25 recipe, and warmed up the mid-tones a bit. Two minutes easy-peasy.

Please Remember to use my Affiliate Links and to Visit the New BAA Online Store 🙂

To show your appreciation for my continuing efforts here, we ask, as always, that you get in the habit of using my B&H affiliate links on the right side of the blog for all of your photo and electronics purchases. Please check the availability of all photographic accessories in the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store, especially the Mongoose M3.6 tripod head, Wimberley lens plates, Delkin flash cards and accessories, and LensCoat stuff.

As always, we sell only what I have used, have tested, and can depend on. We will not sell you junk. We know what you need to make creating great images easy and fun. And we are always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

I would of course appreciate your using our B&H affiliate links for all of your major gear, video, and electronic purchases. For the photographic stuff mentioned in the paragraph above we, and for everything else in the new store, we, meaning BAA, would of course greatly appreciate your business. Here is a huge thank you to the many who have been using our links on a regular basis and those who will be visiting the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store as well.

Facebook

Be sure to like and follow BAA on Facebook by clicking on the logo link upper right. Tanks a stack!

Typos

In all blog posts and Bulletins, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors. Just be right 🙂

October 25th, 2016

Exposure Quiz... Sally Who? And the Canon 100-400mm L IS II with the EF Extender 1.4X III

What’s Up?

I am somewhere in South America. I hope that you are well. Jim and Jen are at the office most days to help you with your mail order needs and Instructional Photo-Tour sign-ups. I still need folks for San Diego, Japan, Galapagos, the Palouse, and the Bear Boat (Grizzly Cubs) trips. Among others 🙂 Please e-mail for couples and discount info for all of the above. Click here for complete IPT info.

I will have relatively decent internet access for all but 22 OCT thru 11 NOV while I am on the Sea Spirit. Best and great picture making, artie

Gear Questions and Advice

Too many folks attending IPTs and dozens of the folks 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… Please know that I am always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.


The Streak: 347!

Today’s blog post marks a totally insane, irrational, illogical, preposterous, absurd, completely ridiculous, unfathomable, silly, incomprehensible, what’s wrong with this guy?, makes-no-sense, 347 days in a row with a new educational blog post. There should be no end in sight until my big South America trip next fall. Or not… As always-–and folks have been doing a really great job recently–-please remember to use our B&H links for your major gear purchases. For best results use one of our many product-specific links; after clicking on one of those you can continue shopping with all subsequent purchases invisibly tracked to BAA. Your doing so is always greatly appreciated. Please remember: web orders only. And please remember also that if you are shopping for items that we carry in the new BAA Online Store (as noted in red at the close of this post below) we would appreciate your business.


sally-lightfoot-crab-on-lave-rock-_y5o8110-punta-punto-espinoza-fernandina-galapagos-ecuador

This image created was on Punta Espinoza in the Galapagos archipelago with the hand held Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM lens, the Canon Extender EF 1.4X III (at 420mm) with the EOS-1D X (now replaced by the rugged, blazingly fast pro body, the Canon EOS-1D X Mark II with 64GB Card and Reader. ISO 800. Evaluative metering at (???): 1/160 sec. at f/8 in Av mode. AWB.

Center AF point (by necessity)/AI Servo Expand/Rear Focus AF as framed was active at the moment of exposure (as is always best when hand holding). See the screen capture below to learn more. Click here to see the latest version of the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to see a larger version.

Sally Lightfoot Crab on lava rock

Sally Lightfoot Crabs

Sally Lightfoot Crabs are common on about half of our landings and several of the landings are outstanding for these colorful
arthropods. I love photographing them on the black lava rock. Though there are lots of Sally Lightfoots they can be shy; you need to approach them lowly and slowly. And I am always on the lookout for good blur situations with the waves breaking over the crabs.

Exposure Quiz

You tell me. Did I add or subtract light to the metered exposure. Either way, how much?


dpp4-sally-lft

DPP 4 Screen Capture

DPP 4 Screen Capture

Note that a tiny strip of the RED channel goes well into the fifth histogram box, almost reaching the righthand axis. I would have loved to included more water at the bottom but I needed AF active when hand holding… With either the Canon EOS-1D X Mark II or the new Canon EOS 5D Mark IV I could have selected an upper sensor and achieved the composition that I wanted…

The Image Optimization

After converting the RAW file in DPP 4 pretty much straight up, I rotated the crab about 4 degrees clockwise to introduce a diagonal element and cropped from the top and the left. Then I did a lot of work (in one minute) with Selective Color. I added about 20 points of CYAN to the REDs and about 5 points of BLACK to the BLACKs. I ran my NIK Color Efex Pro 25/25 recipe to the crab only and added White Neutralizer as well. The last move was a good one as is rendered the light blue on the crab’s shell beautifully. Total time in Photoshop: four minutes. The result: not shabby, and I love the color.

Everything above plus tons more is of course detailed in my Digital Basics File, an instructional PDF that is sent via e-mail. It includes my complete (former PC) digital workflow, dozens of great Photoshop tips, details on using all of my image clean-up tools, the use of Contrast Masks, several different ways of expanding and filling in canvas, all of my time-saving Keyboard Shortcuts, the basics of Quick Masking, Layer Masking, and NIK Color Efex Pro, Digital Eye Doctor techniques, using Gaussian Blurs, Dodge and Burn, a variety of ways to make selections, how to create time-saving actions, and tons more.


galapagpscardbnew2015_0

Tame birds and wildlife. Incredible diversity. You only live once…

GALAPAGOS Photo Cruise of a Lifetime IPT/The Complete Galapagos Photographic Experience. August 8-22, 2017 on the boat. 13 FULL and two half-days of photography: $12,499. Limit: 13 photographers plus the leader: yours truly. Openings: 4.

Same great trip; no price increase!

My two-week Galapagos Photo-Cruises are without equal. The world’s best guide, a killer itinerary, a great boat (the Samba), and two great leaders with ten Galapagos cruises under their belts. Pre-trip and pre-landing location-specific gear advice. In-the-field photo instruction and guidance. Jeez, I almost forgot: fine dining at sea!

The great spots that we will visit include Tower Island (including Prince Phillips Steps and Darwin Bay), Hood Island (including Punta Suarez, the world’s only nesting site of Waved Albatross, and Gardner Bay)—each of the preceding are world class wildlife photography designations that rank right up there with Antarctica, Africa, and Midway. We will also visit Fernandina, Puerto Ayora for the tortoises, Puerto Egas—James Bay, and North Seymour for nesting Blue-footed Boobies in most years, South Plaza for Land Iguanas, Floreana for Greater Flamingoes, and Urbina Bay, all spectacular in their own right. We visit every great spot on a single trip. Plus tons more. And there will be lots of opportunities to snorkel on sunny mid-days for those like me who wish to partake.

It is extremely likely that we will visit the incredible Darwin Bay and the equally incredible Hood Island, world home of Waved Albatross twice on our voyage. The National Park Service takes its sweet time in approving such schedule changes.

We will be the first boat on each island in the morning and the last boat to leave each island every afternoon. If we are blessed with overcast skies, we will often spend 5-6 hours at the best sites. And as noted above, mid-day snorkeling is an option on most sunny days depending on location and conditions. On the 2015 trip most snorkeled with a mega-pod of dolphins. I eased off the zodiac to find hundreds of dolphins swimming just below me. Note: some of the walks are a bit difficult but can be made by anyone if half way decent shape. Great images are possible on all landings with either a hand held 70-200mm lens and a 1.4X teleconverter or an 80- or 100-400. I sometimes bring a longer lens ashore depending on the landing. In 2017 I will be bring the Canon 400mm IS DO II lens. In the past I have brought either the 300mm f/2.8L IS II or the 200-400mm f/4 L IS with Internal Extender.


galapagos-card-a2015

Do consider joining me for this once in a lifetime trip to the Galapagos archipelago. There simply is no finer Galapagos photography trip. Learn why above.

An Amazing Value…

Do know that there are one week Galapagos trips for $8500! Thus, our trip represents a tremendous value; why go all that way and miss half of the great photographic locations?

The Logistics

August 6, 2017: We arrive in Guayaquil, Ecuador a day early to ensure that we do not miss the boat in case of a travel delay.

August 7, 2017: There will be an introductory Galapagos Photography session and a hands on exposure session at our hotel.

August 8, 2017: We fly to the archipelago and board the Samba. Heck, on the 2015 trip some people made great images at the dock in Baltra while our luggage was being loaded!

August 22, 2017: We disembark late morning and fly back to Guayaquil midday; most will overnight there.

Most will fly home on the early morning of July 23 unless they are staying on or going elsewhere (or catching a red-eye flight on the evening of the 22nd).

$12,499 includes just about everything: all transfers, guide and park fees, all food on the boat, transfers and ground transportation, your flights to the archipelago, and three nights (double occupancy) in a top notch hotel in Guayaquil. If you are good to go, a non-refundable deposit of $5,000 per person is due immediately. The second payment of $4,000 is not due until 11/1/16. The final payment of $3449 per person will be due on 2/1/17. A $200 discount will be applied to each of the balances for couples or friends who register at the same time.

Purchasing travel insurance within 2 weeks of our cashing your deposit check is strongly recommended. On two fairly recent cruises a total of 5 folks were forced to cancel less than one week prior to the trip. My family and I use Travel Insurance Services and strongly recommend that you do the same.

Not included: your round trip airfare from your home to and from Guayaquil, beverages on the boat, phone calls, your meals in Guayaquil, personal items, and a $600/person cash tip for the crew and the guide—this works out to roughly $40/day to be shared by the 7 folks who will be waiting on us hand and foot every day for two weeks. The service is so wonderful that many folks choose to tip extra.

Please e-mail for the tentative itinerary or with questions. Please cut and paste “Galapagos 2017 Tentative Itinerary Please” into the Subject line.

Please Remember to use my Affiliate Links and to Visit the New BAA Online Store 🙂

To show your appreciation for my continuing efforts here, we ask, as always, that you get in the habit of using my B&H affiliate links on the right side of the blog for all of your photo and electronics purchases. Please check the availability of all photographic accessories in the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store, especially the Mongoose M3.6 tripod head, Wimberley lens plates, Delkin flash cards and accessories, and LensCoat stuff.

As always, we sell only what I have used, have tested, and can depend on. We will not sell you junk. We know what you need to make creating great images easy and fun. And we are always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

I would of course appreciate your using our B&H affiliate links for all of your major gear, video, and electronic purchases. For the photographic stuff mentioned in the paragraph above we, and for everything else in the new store, we, meaning BAA, would of course greatly appreciate your business. Here is a huge thank you to the many who have been using our links on a regular basis and those who will be visiting the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store as well.

Facebook

Be sure to like and follow BAA on Facebook by clicking on the logo link upper right. Tanks a stack!

Typos

In all blog posts and Bulletins, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors. Just be right 🙂

October 24th, 2016

Swimming With Iguanas/Why f/14? And Best Photoshop Tool for Eliminating Specular Highlights...

What’s Up?

I am somewhere in South America. I hope that you are well. Jim and Jen are at the office most days to help you with your mail order needs and Instructional Photo-Tour sign-ups. I still need folks for San Diego, Japan, Galapagos, the Palouse, and the Bear Boat (Grizzly Cubs) trips. Among others 🙂 Please e-mail for couples and discount info for all of the above. Click here for complete IPT info.

I will have relatively decent internet access for all but 22 OCT thru 11 NOV while I am on the Sea Spirit. Best and great picture making, artie

Gear Questions and Advice

Too many folks attending IPTs and dozens of the folks 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… Please know that I am always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.


The Streak: 346!

Today’s blog post marks a totally insane, irrational, illogical, preposterous, absurd, completely ridiculous, unfathomable, silly, incomprehensible, what’s wrong with this guy?, makes-no-sense, 346 days in a row with a new educational blog post. There should be no end in sight until my big South America trip next fall. Or not… As always-–and folks have been doing a really great job recently–-please remember to use our B&H links for your major gear purchases. For best results use one of our many product-specific links; after clicking on one of those you can continue shopping with all subsequent purchases invisibly tracked to BAA. Your doing so is always greatly appreciated. Please remember: web orders only. And please remember also that if you are shopping for items that we carry in the new BAA Online Store (as noted in red at the close of this post below) we would appreciate your business.


marine-iguana-swimming-_y5o8553-punta-punto-espinoza-fernandina-galapagos-ecuador

This image was created on the Punta Espinoza landing in the Galapagos archipelago on the 2015 Galapagos Photo-Cruise with the Induro GIT 304L/Mongoose M3.6-mountedCanon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM lens, the Canon Extender EF 1.4X III (at 420mm) with the EOS-1D X (now replaced by the rugged, blazingly fast pro body, the Canon EOS-1D X Mark II with 64GB Card and Reader. ISO 400. Evaluative Metering at 0: 1/200 sec. at f/14 in Av mode. AWB.

Center AF point (by necessity)/AI Servo Expand/Rear Focus AF as framed was active at the moment of exposure; the active AF point was about an inch behind the end of those smiling jaws. No worries, they eat only seaweed. Click here to see the latest version of the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to see a larger version.

Marine Iguana swimming

Swimming With Iguanas

My long time guide and friend Juan knows the animals and birds of the Galapagos as well as anyone. He has been making landings since he was about three as his Dad was a guide. He also knows the weather and the tides and how both affect the animals. He had us in perfect position as the morning sun warmed the iguanas and the tide dropped. Expecting him to say “no” I asked if it would be OK to slide into the shallow water and photograph the swimming reptiles at their eye level. One he said “sure, not problem it did not take me long to find a nice spot seating on a flat slab of lava rock with the water up to my chest. What fun. It was much better than lying downhill on lava rock…

Why f/14?

We will make this as easy as possible: multiple choice with just two answers. Be sure to let us know why you chose your answer.

A-I screwed up; f/14 was just a big mistake.
B-I wanted some extra depth-of-field.

Best Photoshop Tool for Eliminating Specular Highlights

The very best tool for eliminating specular highlights is the Spot Healing Brush (my keyboard shortcut J). It took me about ten minutes to get rid of all the squiggly ones. I used two small Quick Masks to eliminate the two larger hot areas just above the iguana’s nostril.

The Image Optimization

After converting the RAW file in DPP–I raised the Shadows 3 points–I brought the image into Photoshop. As you can see by looking at the original in the animated GIF above, the converted TIFF was much too contrasty and thus, the detail in many of the darker areas was blocked up. Note: the histogram was fine with no data near the left hand axis. The first step was to run my NIK Color Efex Pro 50/50 recipe at 100% opacity. That is a rarity these days but this image needed it. In addition, I applied the Reduced Contrast setting that I created and saved in Curves; I pulled the highlights down a bit and pulled the dark tones up a bit.

Everything above plus tons more is of course detailed in my Digital Basics File, an instructional PDF that is sent via e-mail. It includes my complete (former PC) digital workflow, dozens of great Photoshop tips, details on using all of my image clean-up tools, the use of Contrast Masks, several different ways of expanding and filling in canvas, all of my time-saving Keyboard Shortcuts, the basics of Quick Masking, Layer Masking, and NIK Color Efex Pro, Digital Eye Doctor techniques, using Gaussian Blurs, Dodge and Burn, a variety of ways to make selections, how to create time-saving actions, and tons more.

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

Your Take?

Would you have done anything different when optimizing this image? What? And why?


galapagpscardbnew2015_0

Tame birds and wildlife. Incredible diversity. You only live once…

GALAPAGOS Photo Cruise of a Lifetime IPT/The Complete Galapagos Photographic Experience. August 8-22, 2017 on the boat. 13 FULL and two half-days of photography: $12,499. Limit: 13 photographers plus the leader: yours truly. Openings: 4.

Same great trip; no price increase!

My two-week Galapagos Photo-Cruises are without equal. The world’s best guide, a killer itinerary, a great boat (the Samba), and two great leaders with ten Galapagos cruises under their belts. Pre-trip and pre-landing location-specific gear advice. In-the-field photo instruction and guidance. Jeez, I almost forgot: fine dining at sea!

The great spots that we will visit include Tower Island (including Prince Phillips Steps and Darwin Bay), Hood Island (including Punta Suarez, the world’s only nesting site of Waved Albatross, and Gardner Bay)—each of the preceding are world class wildlife photography designations that rank right up there with Antarctica, Africa, and Midway. We will also visit Fernandina, Puerto Ayora for the tortoises, Puerto Egas—James Bay, and North Seymour for nesting Blue-footed Boobies in most years, South Plaza for Land Iguanas, Floreana for Greater Flamingoes, and Urbina Bay, all spectacular in their own right. We visit every great spot on a single trip. Plus tons more. And there will be lots of opportunities to snorkel on sunny mid-days for those like me who wish to partake.

It is extremely likely that we will visit the incredible Darwin Bay and the equally incredible Hood Island, world home of Waved Albatross twice on our voyage. The National Park Service takes its sweet time in approving such schedule changes.

We will be the first boat on each island in the morning and the last boat to leave each island every afternoon. If we are blessed with overcast skies, we will often spend 5-6 hours at the best sites. And as noted above, mid-day snorkeling is an option on most sunny days depending on location and conditions. On the 2015 trip most snorkeled with a mega-pod of dolphins. I eased off the zodiac to find hundreds of dolphins swimming just below me. Note: some of the walks are a bit difficult but can be made by anyone if half way decent shape. Great images are possible on all landings with either a hand held 70-200mm lens and a 1.4X teleconverter or an 80- or 100-400. I sometimes bring a longer lens ashore depending on the landing. In 2017 I will be bring the Canon 400mm IS DO II lens. In the past I have brought either the 300mm f/2.8L IS II or the 200-400mm f/4 L IS with Internal Extender.


galapagos-card-a2015

Do consider joining me for this once in a lifetime trip to the Galapagos archipelago. There simply is no finer Galapagos photography trip. Learn why above.

An Amazing Value…

Do know that there are one week Galapagos trips for $8500! Thus, our trip represents a tremendous value; why go all that way and miss half of the great photographic locations?

The Logistics

August 6, 2017: We arrive in Guayaquil, Ecuador a day early to ensure that we do not miss the boat in case of a travel delay.

August 7, 2017: There will be an introductory Galapagos Photography session and a hands on exposure session at our hotel.

August 8, 2017: We fly to the archipelago and board the Samba. Heck, on the 2015 trip some people made great images at the dock in Baltra while our luggage was being loaded!

August 22, 2017: We disembark late morning and fly back to Guayaquil midday; most will overnight there.

Most will fly home on the early morning of July 23 unless they are staying on or going elsewhere (or catching a red-eye flight on the evening of the 22nd).

$12,499 includes just about everything: all transfers, guide and park fees, all food on the boat, transfers and ground transportation, your flights to the archipelago, and three nights (double occupancy) in a top notch hotel in Guayaquil. If you are good to go, a non-refundable deposit of $5,000 per person is due immediately. The second payment of $4,000 is not due until 11/1/16. The final payment of $3449 per person will be due on 2/1/17. A $200 discount will be applied to each of the balances for couples or friends who register at the same time.

Purchasing travel insurance within 2 weeks of our cashing your deposit check is strongly recommended. On two fairly recent cruises a total of 5 folks were forced to cancel less than one week prior to the trip. My family and I use Travel Insurance Services and strongly recommend that you do the same.

Not included: your round trip airfare from your home to and from Guayaquil, beverages on the boat, phone calls, your meals in Guayaquil, personal items, and a $600/person cash tip for the crew and the guide—this works out to roughly $40/day to be shared by the 7 folks who will be waiting on us hand and foot every day for two weeks. The service is so wonderful that many folks choose to tip extra.

Please e-mail for the tentative itinerary or with questions. Please cut and paste “Galapagos 2017 Tentative Itinerary Please” into the Subject line.

Please Remember to use my Affiliate Links and to Visit the New BAA Online Store 🙂

To show your appreciation for my continuing efforts here, we ask, as always, that you get in the habit of using my B&H affiliate links on the right side of the blog for all of your photo and electronics purchases. Please check the availability of all photographic accessories in the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store, especially the Mongoose M3.6 tripod head, Wimberley lens plates, Delkin flash cards and accessories, and LensCoat stuff.

As always, we sell only what I have used, have tested, and can depend on. We will not sell you junk. We know what you need to make creating great images easy and fun. And we are always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

I would of course appreciate your using our B&H affiliate links for all of your major gear, video, and electronic purchases. For the photographic stuff mentioned in the paragraph above we, and for everything else in the new store, we, meaning BAA, would of course greatly appreciate your business. Here is a huge thank you to the many who have been using our links on a regular basis and those who will be visiting the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store as well.

Facebook

Be sure to like and follow BAA on Facebook by clicking on the logo link upper right. Tanks a stack!

Typos

In all blog posts and Bulletins, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors. Just be right 🙂

October 23rd, 2016

7D II Conquers Shady Duck at ISO 800...

What’s Up?

I am somewhere in South America. I hope that you are well. Jim and Jen are at the office most days to help you with your mail order needs and Instructional Photo-Tour sign-ups. I still need folks for San Diego, Japan, Galapagos, the Palouse, and the Bear Boat (Grizzly Cubs) trips. Among others 🙂 Please e-mail for couples and discount info for all of the above. Click here for complete IPT info.

I will have internet access for all but 22 OCT thru 11 NOV while I am on the Sea Spirit. Best and great picture making, artie

Gear Questions and Advice

Too many folks attending BAA IPTs and dozens of the folks 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… Please know that I am always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.


The Streak: 345!

Today’s blog post marks a totally insane, irrational, illogical, preposterous, absurd, completely ridiculous, unfathomable, silly, incomprehensible, what’s wrong with this guy?, makes-no-sense, 345 days in a row with a new educational blog post. There should be no end in sight until my big South America trip next fall. Or not… As always-–and folks have been doing a really great job recently–-please remember to use our B&H links for your major gear purchases. For best results use one of our many product-specific links; after clicking on one of those you can continue shopping with all subsequent purchases invisibly tracked to BAA. Your doing so is always greatly appreciated. Please remember: web orders only. And please remember also that if you are shopping for items that we carry in the new BAA Online Store (as noted in red at the close of this post below) we would appreciate your business.


ring-necked-duck-hen-calling-_y8a4311-santee-lakes-ca

This image was created on the 2016 San Diego IPT with the hand held Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM lens and the amazing Canon EOS 7D Mark II. ISO 800. See below to learn how I wound up at 1/500 sec. at f/5.6.

Center AF point/AI Servo Expand/Rear Focus AF as framed was active at the moment of exposure (as is always best when hand holding). The selected AF point was right on the center of the bird’s breast, conveniently on the same plane as the bird’s eye. Click here to see the latest version of the Rear Focus Tutorial.

Ring-necked Duck hen calling

Ducks on the San Diego IPT

We spend one morning and an afternoon or two on the IPT photographing ducks, primarily Wood and Ring-necked Ducks. On a bright afternoon we fed the ducks under a big oak tree so that we could work them in the shade. Note: feeding the ducks at our location is not only permitted but encouraged. In any case the birds were close so we were all hand holding our intermediate telephotos lenses. The key to success was exposing well to the right. See more on that below.

The San Diego Site Guide

If you would love to learn all the great spots in and around San Diego and La Jolla, get yourself a copy of the BAA San Diego Site guide here. It is the next best thing to being on an IPT.


ddp4-rnduckhen-hi-key

The DPP 4 Screen Capture for today’s featured image

On Exposing to the Right…

With a relatively dark subject and the light-toned water and with the 7D II and its relatively small pixels, it is vitally important to expose to the right even to the point of having a few blinkies on the lightest water. Despite the histogram well to the right and the dark tones well off the left-hand axis, I brightened this image a bit during the RAW conversion and in addition, moved the Shadow slider to +2 as well.

The exposure was probably about 1 2/3 stops as framed or at least +3 stops off the light toned water. I brought up the detail in the duck with a layer of my NIK Color Efex Pro 25/25 recipe.


san-diego-card-neesie

San Diego offers a wealth of very attractive natural history subjects. With annual visits spanning more than three decades I have lot of experience there….

2017 San Diego 4 1/2-DAY BIRDS AS ART Instructional Photo-Tour (IPT) JAN 11 thru and including the morning session on JAN 15: 4 1/2 days: $1999.

(Limit: 10/openings 8)

Meet and Greet at 7:00pm on the evening before the IPT begins; Tuesday 1/10/17.

Join me in San Diego to photograph the spectacular breeding plumage Brown Pelicans with their fire-engine red and olive green bill pouches; Brandt’s and Double-crested Cormorants; breeding plumage Wood and Ring-necked Duck; other duck species possible including Lesser Scaup, Redhead, and Surf Scoter; a variety of gulls including Western, California, and the gorgeous Heerman’s, all in full breeding plumage; shorebirds including Marbled Godwit, Willet, Sanderling and Black-bellied Plover; many others possible including Least, Western, and Spotted Sandpiper, Whimbrel, Black and Ruddy Turnstone, Semipalmated Plover, and Surfbird; Harbor Seals (depending on the current regulations) and California Sea Lions; and Bird of Paradise flowers. And as you can see by studying the two IPT cards there are some nice bird-scape and landscape opportunities as well.

With gorgeous subjects just sitting there waiting to have their pictures taken, photographing the pelicans on the cliffs is about as easy as nature photography gets. With the winds from the east almost every morning there is usually some excellent flight photography. And the pelicans are almost always doing something interesting: preening, scratching, bill pouch cleaning, or squabbling. And then there are those crazy head throws that are thought to be a form of intra-flock communication.

Did I mention that there are wealth of great birds and natural history subjects in San Diego in winter?


san-diego-card-b

Though the pelicans will be the stars of the show on this IPT there will be many other handsome and captivating subjects in wonderful settings.

The San Diego Details

This IPT will include five 3 1/2 hour morning photo sessions, four 2 1/2 hour afternoon photo sessions, four lunches, and after-lunch image review and Photoshop sessions. To ensure early starts, breakfasts will be your responsibility.

A $599 non-refundable deposit is required to hold your slot for this IPT. You can send a check (made out to “Arthur Morris) to us at BIRDS AS ART, PO Box 7245, Indian Lake Estates, FL, 33855. Or call Jim or Jennifer at the office with a credit card at 863-692-0906. Your balance, payable only by check, will be due on 9/11//2016. If we do not receive your check for the balance on or before the due date we will try to fill your spot from the waiting list. Please print, complete, and sign the form that is linked to here and shoot it to us along with your deposit check. If you register by phone, please print, complete and sign the form as noted above and either mail it to us or e-mail the scan. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact me via e-mail.

Please Remember to use my Affiliate Links and to Visit the New BAA Online Store 🙂

To show your appreciation for my continuing efforts here, we ask, as always, that you get in the habit of using my B&H affiliate links on the right side of the blog for all of your photo and electronics purchases. Please check the availability of all photographic accessories in the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store, especially the Mongoose M3.6 tripod head, Wimberley lens plates, Delkin flash cards and accessories, and LensCoat stuff.

As always, we sell only what I have used, have tested, and can depend on. We will not sell you junk. We know what you need to make creating great images easy and fun. And we are always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

I would of course appreciate your using our B&H affiliate links for all of your major gear, video, and electronic purchases. For the photographic stuff mentioned in the paragraph above we, and for everything else in the new store, we, meaning BAA, would of course greatly appreciate your business. Here is a huge thank you to the many who have been using our links on a regular basis and those who will be visiting the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store as well.

Facebook

Be sure to like and follow BAA on Facebook by clicking on the logo link upper right. Tanks a stack!

Typos

In all blog posts and Bulletins, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors. Just be right 🙂

October 22nd, 2016

Ship Ahoy! And Insanity ...

Stuff

I hope that you are well. All will be boarding the Sea Spirit in a few hours on the late afternoon of SAT 22 OCT 2016. As noted previously, I will be without any internet access until 12 NOV. When I do get online again my first priorities will be taking care of IPT and Used Photo Gear business. Jim and Jen are at the office most days to help you with your mail order needs and Instructional Photo-Tour sign-ups. I still need folks for San Diego, Japan, Galapagos, the Palouse, and the Bear Boat (Grizzly Cubs) trips. Among others 🙂 Please e-mail for couples and discount info for all of the above. Click here for complete IPT info.

I will have intermittent internet access after we get off the ship until the end of my South American adventure.

Long Term Plans for the Blog

Right now I have prepared a brand new educational blog post for every single day from tomorrow until December 12, 2016. That leaves 13 or 14 more to do to keep the streak alive until I am back home. After that, my goal is to run the streak up with a new blog post every day for the rest of my life, or at least until I am unable to do so.

Enjoy the ride.

Huge Thanks to All

Huge thanks to all for realizing the monumental amount of work that I have done to keep the current streak alive. And huge thanks for visiting the blog every day as always. Blog readership is actually up a bit over the past few weeks. Lastly, huge thanks for continuing to use my B&H affiliate links for your major new gear purchases. As noted here previously, my two EOS 5D Mark IV bodies have become my everyday bird photography camera bodies. I go to the 1DX Mark II only in high ISO or pure flight situations.

Insanity?

I have decided to live life to the fullest and extend my Falklands land-based visit by one week in order to get a crack at the albatross and rockhopper chicks on Saunders and Bleaker. I should be back in Orlando late on X-mas day. I would like to wish you and yours a wondrous holiday season.

October 22nd, 2016

Just So You Know

What’s Up?

I am in Stanley, The Falklands. It is 4:55pm on the afternoon of FRI OCT 21, 2016 as I type. We just enjoyed six of the greatest days of bird photography in my career on Saunders and Bleaker. It was so wonderful that I am announcing a return IPT in two years. Please see the details below. I hope that you are well. I am doing far better after the gall bladder surgery than I had any right to expect. I beat my cold on Bleaker on WED but it seems as if I am fighting another one now. We get on the ship tomorrow …

Jim and Jen are at the office most days to help you with your mail order needs and Instructional Photo-Tour sign-ups. I still need folks for San Diego, Japan, Galapagos, the Palouse, and the Bear Boat (Grizzly Cubs) trips. Among others 🙂 Please e-mail for couples and discount info for all of the above. Click here for complete IPT info.

Please note that I will be offline 100% from 22 OCT to 6 NOV so do not be shocked if I do not answer your e-mails either during that period or in the weeks that follow when I will have limited internet access. As always, I will do my best.


Gear Questions and Advice

Too many folks attending BAA IPTs and dozens of the folks 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… Please know that I am always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

The Streak: 344!

Today’s blog post marks a totally insane, irrational, illogical, preposterous, absurd, completely ridiculous, unfathomable, silly, incomprehensible, what’s wrong with this guy?, makes-no-sense, 344 days in a row with a new educational blog post. There should be no end in sight until my big South America trip next fall. Or not… As always-–and folks have been doing a really great job recently–-please remember to use our B&H links for your major gear purchases. For best results use one of our many product-specific links; after clicking on one of those you can continue shopping with all subsequent purchases invisibly tracked to BAA. Your doing so is always greatly appreciated. Please remember: web orders only. And please remember also that if you are shopping for items that we carry in the new BAA Online Store (as noted in red at the close of this post below) we would appreciate your business.


black-browed-albatross-chick-flapping-wings-_y9c2814-new-island-falkland-islands

Image #1: Black-browed Albatross chick flapping

I will be leading an innovative land-based Falklands IPT leaving from Stanley, The Falklands on SAT 22 DEC 2018 and flying back to Santiago, Chile on SAT JAN 5, 2019. Why innovative? We will be spending six nights at The Neck on Saunders Island, one of the premier wildlife photography destinations on the planet. That followed by three nights on Sea Lion Island, and ending up with four nights on Bleaker.

What else is innovative? Most two-week land-based photo trips have you visiting four or five or even six islands hopping on a FIGAS plane every two days or so. As you are at the mercy of the flight operations you may miss several mornings or afternoons of photography. Why not stay at three great locations, locations that offer the best photo opps without any long walks?. Saunders and Bleaker will get you close-up to the great species with ease. At The Neck we will be staying in rustic cabins right in the heart of the action. There is great stuff on Sea Lion a short walk from the lodge and we have a vehicle to use for the more distant locations. On Bleaker we will be enjoying near-luxury accommodations and great home-cooked meals. And there we will have two vehicles at our disposal.

What else? The first Black-browed Albatross chicks hatch every year on or about 12 DEC. If you visit in early January you will miss most of the tiny chicks. And worse yet, the Rockhopper Penguin chicks are leaving by the second week of January. This trip is timed to get you chances on tiny fluffy white albatross chicks, some of the larger fluffy white chicks, and the rockhopper chicks as well.

With several years of experience on the Falklands, more than six in fact, nobody knows how to read the sky conditions, the wind, and the light better than me and have the group in the best possible spot at all times. With lots of strong west winds, you will need someone who knows how to put you in position to make good images on near-impossible mornings.

If you are seriously interested, please shoot me an e-mail and I will get back to you during the second week of November. Happy campers only please.

ps: You can make a ton of great images on this trip with “just” an 80- or 100-400 lens.


black-browed-albatross-on-nest-with-chick-_w3c1192-new-island-falkland-islands

Image #2: Black-browed Albatross on nest with small chick.


black-browed-albatross-grooming-chick-_y9c2801-new-island-falkland-islands

Image #3: Black-browed Albatross adult preening chick


rcokhopper-penguin-with-large-chick-_y9c2780-new-island-falkland-islands

Image #4: Rockhopper Penguin and chick side by side


rockhopper-penguin-with-chick-_w3c1302-new-island-falkland-islands

Image #5: Rockhopper Penguin standing protectively over chick

Your Favorite?

Which of the five images above is your favorite? Please let us know why.


bearboatcubscard-1

Images and card copyright Arthur Morris/BEARS AS ART 🙂

2017 Bear Boat Coastal Brown Bear Cubs IPTs: July 18-24, 2017 from Kodiak, AK: 5 FULL & 2 Half DAYS: $6699. Happy campers only! Maximum 8/Openings 3.

Join me in spectacular Katmai National Park, AK for six days of photographing Coastal Brown Bears. Mid-July is prime time for making images of small, football-sized cubs. The cubs, and these dates, are so popular that I had to reserve them three years in advance to secure them. There are lots of bears each year in June, but the mothers only rarely risk bringing their tiny cubs out in the open in fear of predation by rival bears. In addition to making portraits of both adults and cubs, we hope to photograph frolicking and squabbling youngsters and tender nursing scenes. At this time of year, the bears are either grazing in luxuriant grass or clamming. There will also be some two- and three-year old cubs to add to the fun. And we will get to photograph it all.

We will live on our tour operator’s luxurious new boat. At 78 feet long its 24 foot beam makes it quite spacious as well. And the food is great. We will likely spend most of our time at famed Geographic Harbor as that is where the bears are generally concentrated in summer. On the odd chance that we do need to relocate to another location we can do so quickly and easily without having to venture into any potentially rough seas. We land via a 25 foot skiff that has lots of room for as much gear as we can carry.

Aside from the bears we should get to photograph Horned and Tufted Puffin and should get nice stuff on Mew Gull, Glaucous-winged Gull, Black-legged Kittiwake, Harbor Seal, and Steller’s Sea Lion as well. A variety of tundra-nesting shorebirds including Western Sandpiper and both yellowlegs are also possible. Halibut fishing (license required/not included) is optional.

It is mandatory that you be in Kodiak no later than the late afternoon of July 17 to avoid missing the float planes to the boat on the morning of July 18. Again, with air travel in Alaska (or anywhere else for that matter) subject to possible delays, being on Kodiak on July 16 is a much better plan.

Barring any delays, we will get to photograph bears on our first afternoon and then again every day for the next five days after that, all weather permitting of course. On our last morning on the boat, July 24, those who would like to enjoy one last photo session will have the opportunity to do so. The group will return to Kodiak via float plane from late morning through midday. Most folks will then fly to Anchorage and to continue on red-eye flights to their home cities.

What’s included? 7 DAYS/6 NIGHTS on the boat as above. All meals on the boat. National Park and guide fees. In-the-field photo tips, instruction, and guidance. An insight into the mind of two top professionals; we will constantly let you know what we are thinking, what we are doing, and why we are doing it. Small group image review, image sharing, and informal Photoshop instruction on the boat.

What’s not included: Your round trip airfare to and from Kodiak, AK (almost surely through Anchorage). Your lodging and meals on Kodiak. The cost of the round-trip float plane to the boat and then back to Kodiak as above. The cost of a round trip last year was $550. The suggested crew tip of $200.

Have you ever walked with the bears?

Is this an expensive trip? Yes, of course. But with 5 full and two half days, a wealth of great subjects, and the fact that you will be walking with the bears just yards away (or less….), it will be one of the great natural history experiences of your life. Most folks who take part in a Bear Boat IPT wind up coming back for more.

A $2,000 per person non-refundable deposit by check only made out to “BIRDS AS ART” is required to hold your spot. Please click here to read our cancellation policies. Then please print, read, and sign the necessary paperwork here and send it to us by mail to PO Box 7245, Indian Lake Estates, FL 33855.

Your deposit is due when you sign up. That leaves a balance of $4699. The next payment of $2699 will be due on September 15, 2016. The final payment of $2000 is due on February 15, 2017. We hope that you can join us for what will be a wondrously exciting trip.

Please Remember to use my Affiliate Links and to Visit the New BAA Online Store 🙂

To show your appreciation for my continuing efforts here, we ask, as always, that you get in the habit of using my B&H affiliate links on the right side of the blog for all of your photo and electronics purchases. Please check the availability of all photographic accessories in the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store, especially the Mongoose M3.6 tripod head, Wimberley lens plates, Delkin flash cards and accessories, and LensCoat stuff.

As always, we sell only what I have used, have tested, and can depend on. We will not sell you junk. We know what you need to make creating great images easy and fun. And we are always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

I would of course appreciate your using our B&H affiliate links for all of your major gear, video, and electronic purchases. For the photographic stuff mentioned in the paragraph above we, and for everything else in the new store, we, meaning BAA, would of course greatly appreciate your business. Here is a huge thank you to the many who have been using our links on a regular basis and those who will be visiting the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store as well.

Facebook

Be sure to like and follow BAA on Facebook by clicking on the logo link upper right. Tanks a stack!

Typos

In all blog posts and Bulletins, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors. Just be right 🙂

October 21st, 2016

Please Note...

Please Note…

Please note that as I board the Sea Spirit for the great South Georgia Expedition on the afternoon of SAT 22 OCT I will be offline 100% from 22 OCT to 6 NOV. Please do not be shocked if I do not answer your e-mails either during that period or in the week or two that follow when I will have limited internet access. As always, I will do my best.

I hope that you and yours are well and getting ready to enjoy a great holiday season.

later and love, artie

October 21st, 2016

100-400 II Versatility: Colorful Desert Ghost Town Wall and Doorways Image

What’s Up?

I am somewhere in South America. I hope that you are well. Jim and Jen are at the office most days to help you with your mail order needs and Instructional Photo-Tour sign-ups. I still need folks for San Diego, Japan, Galapagos, the Palouse, and the Bear Boat (Grizzly Cubs) trips. Among others 🙂 Please e-mail for couples and discount info for all of the above. Click here for complete IPT info.

I will have decent internet access for all but 22 OCT thru 11 NOV while I am on the Sea Spirit. Best and great picture making, artie

Gear Questions and Advice

Too many folks attending BAA IPTs and dozens of the folks 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… Please know that I am always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.


The Streak: 343!

Today’s blog post marks a totally insane, irrational, illogical, preposterous, absurd, completely ridiculous, unfathomable, silly, incomprehensible, what’s wrong with this guy?, makes-no-sense, 343 days in a row with a new educational blog post. There should be no end in sight until my big South America trip next fall. Or not… As always-–and folks have been doing a really great job recently–-please remember to use our B&H links for your major gear purchases. For best results use one of our many product-specific links; after clicking on one of those you can continue shopping with all subsequent purchases invisibly tracked to BAA. Your doing so is always greatly appreciated. Please remember: web orders only. And please remember also that if you are shopping for items that we carry in the new BAA Online Store (as noted in red at the close of this post below) we would appreciate your business.

Please remember that folks sending new inquiries about selling new gear are best advised to get in touch with me at the end of this month.



colorful-doorways-_t0a1679-kolmanskop-namibia

This image was created at Kolmanskop Ghost Town, Namibia. I used the Induro GIT 304L tripod/Induro BHM1/-mounted Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM lens (at 100mm) and the mega mega-pixel Canon EOS 5DS R. ISO 800. Evaluative metering +1 stop in-camera Art Vivid HDR +/- 1 stop around a base exposure of .5 sec at f/32. I set the color temperature to K4500 to offset the too saturated Art Vivid colors.

Center AF point/AI Servo Expand/Rear Focus AF on the door frame on our right door frame and re-compose slightly. Click here to see the latest version of the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to see a larger version.

Colorful Desert Ghost Town Wall and Doorways

Colorful Desert Ghost Town Wall and Doorway Image

Virtually all of sand in the dwellings and other structures at the old diamond mining settlement were trampled with footprints so I went to longer focal lengths with the 100-400II in an effort to create pattern-type somewhat abstract images without the offending footprints. With some images, I did opt to include a swatch of smooth, undisturbed, patterned sand.

John Shaw wrote something to this effect, “The (nature) photographer’s job is to create order out of chaos.” The 100-400II gives us the ability to do exactly that on a regular basis. That is just one of the reasons that I love mine so much.

Many of the old barns and farm building of the Palouse remind me of Kolmanskop. It’s not quite as dry, and it’s a lot shorter flight!


palouse-card-2017layers

Palouse 2016 Horizontals Card

Why Different?

Announcing the 2017 BIRDS AS ART Palouse Instructional Photo-Tour

In what ways will the 2017 BIRDS AS ART Palouse Instructional Photo-Tour be different from the most other Palouse workshops?

There are so many great locations that a seven-day IPT (as opposed to the typical three- or five-day workshops) will give the group time to visit (and revisit) many of the best spots while allowing you to maximize your air travel dollars. In addition, it will allow us to enjoy a slightly more relaxed pace.

You will be assured of being in the right location for the given weather and sky conditions.

You will learn and hone both basic and advanced compositional and image design skills.

You will learn to design powerful, graphic images.

You will visit all of the iconic locations and a few spectacular ones that are much less frequently visited.

You will learn long lens landscape techniques.

You will learn to master any exposure situation in one minute or less.

You will learn the fine points of Canon in-camera (5D Mark III, 5DS R, and 7D II) HDR techniques.

You will be able to share a variety of my exotic Canon lenses including the Canon EF 11-24mm f/4L USM lens and the Canon EF 8-15mm f/4L Fisheye USM lens, aka the “circle lens.”

You will learn to use your longest focal lengths to create rolling field and Urbex abstracts.

You will learn when and how to use a variety of neutral density filters to create pleasing blurs of the Palouse’s gorgeous rolling farmlands.

As always, you will learn to see like a pro. You will learn what makes one situation prime and another seemingly similar one a waste of your time. You will learn to see the situation and to create a variety of top-notch images.

You will learn to use super-wide lenses both for big skies and building interiors.

You will learn when, why, and how to use infrared capture; if you do not own an infrared body, you will get to borrow mine.

You will learn to use both backlight and side-light to create powerful and dramatic landscape images.

This trip will run with one participant.


palouse-2017-card-layers

Palouse 2016 Verticals Card

The 2017 BIRDS AS ART Palouse Instructional Photo-Tour
June 8-14, 2017. Seven full days of photography. Meet and greet at 7:30pm on Wednesday, June 7: $2,499. Limit 10/Openings: 7.

Rolling farmlands provide a magical patchwork of textures and colors, especially when viewed from the top of Steptoe Butte where we will enjoy spectacular sunrises and at least one nice sunset. We will photograph grand landscapes and mini-scenics of the rolling hills and farm fields. I will bring you to more than a few really neat old abandoned barns and farmhouses in idyllic settings. There is no better way to improve your compositional and image design skills and to develop your creativity than to join me for this trip. Photoshop and image sharing sessions when we have the time and energy…. We get up early and stay out late and the days are long.

Over the past three years, with the help of a friend, we found all the iconic locations and, in addition, lots of spectacular new old barns and breath-taking landforms and vistas. What’s included: In-the-field instruction, guidance, lessons, and inspiration, my extensive knowledge of the area, all lunches, motel lobby grab and go breakfasts, and Photoshop and image sharing sessions. As above, there will be a meet and greet at 7:30pm on the evening before the workshop begins.

To Sign Up

Your non-refundable deposit of $500 is required to hold your spot. Please let me know via e-mail that you will be joining this IPT. Then you can either call Jim or Jennifer at 863-692-0906 during business hours to arrange for the payment of your deposit; if by check, please make out to “BIRDS AS ART” and mail it to: Arthur Morris/BIRDS AS ART, PO Box 7245, Indian Lake Estates, FL, 33855. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact me via e-mail: artie.

Travel Insurance Services offers a variety of plans and options. Included with the Elite Option or available as an upgrade to the Basic & Plus Options. You can also purchase Cancel for Any Reason Coverage that expands the list of reasons for your canceling to include things such as sudden work or family obligation and even a simple change of mind. You can learn more here: Travel Insurance Services. Do note that many plans require that you purchase your travel insurance within 14 days of our cashing your deposit check. Whenever purchasing travel insurance be sure to read the fine print carefully even when dealing with reputable firms like TSI.

Please Remember to use my Affiliate Links and to Visit the New BAA Online Store 🙂

To show your appreciation for my continuing efforts here, we ask, as always, that you get in the habit of using my B&H affiliate links on the right side of the blog for all of your photo and electronics purchases. Please check the availability of all photographic accessories in the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store, especially the Mongoose M3.6 tripod head, Wimberley lens plates, Delkin flash cards and accessories, and LensCoat stuff.

As always, we sell only what I have used, have tested, and can depend on. We will not sell you junk. We know what you need to make creating great images easy and fun. And we are always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

I would of course appreciate your using our B&H affiliate links for all of your major gear, video, and electronic purchases. For the photographic stuff mentioned in the paragraph above we, and for everything else in the new store, we, meaning BAA, would of course greatly appreciate your business. Here is a huge thank you to the many who have been using our links on a regular basis and those who will be visiting the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store as well.

Facebook

Be sure to like and follow BAA on Facebook by clicking on the logo link upper right. Tanks a stack!

Typos

In all blog posts and Bulletins, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors. Just be right 🙂

October 20th, 2016

Laughing all the way to Heaven, Image Design Considerations, and an AF Tip...

What’s Up?

I am on Bleaker Island in The Falklands. Our stay on Saunders Island was truly amazing. George G. made one of the very best avian images I have ever had the pleasure to see. I will share it with you hear at some point. I am feeling great after the surgery and beat my cold after about a week. The last thing that I wanted was to get on the Sea Spirit sick…

Jim and Jen are at the office most days to help you with your mail order needs and Instructional Photo-Tour sign-ups. I still need folks for San Diego, Japan, Galapagos, the Palouse, and the Bear Boat (Grizzly Cubs) trips. Among others 🙂 Please e-mail for couples and discount info for all of the above. Click here for complete IPT info.

I will have internet access for all but 22 OCT thru 11 NOV while I am on the Sea Spirit. Best and great picture making, artie

Gear Questions and Advice

Too many folks attending IPTs and dozens of the folks 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… Please know that I am always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.


The Streak: 342!

Today’s blog post marks a totally insane, irrational, illogical, preposterous, absurd, completely ridiculous, unfathomable, silly, incomprehensible, what’s wrong with this guy?, makes-no-sense, 342 days in a row with a new educational blog post. There should be no end in sight until my big South America trip next fall. Or not… As always-–and folks have been doing a really great job recently–-please remember to use our B&H links for your major gear purchases. For best results use one of our many product-specific links; after clicking on one of those you can continue shopping with all subsequent purchases invisibly tracked to BAA. Your doing so is always greatly appreciated. Please remember: web orders only. And please remember also that if you are shopping for items that we carry in the new BAA Online Store (as noted in red at the close of this post below) we would appreciate your business.


laughing-gull-1st-winter-plumage-_28a2551-fort-desoto-county-park-fl

This image was created on my Fort DeSoto IPT scouting trip with the hand held Canon EF 400mm f/4 DO IS II USM lens, the Canon Extender EF 1.4X III, and the Canon EOS 5D Mark IV . ISO 500. Evaluative metering +1 stop: 1/500 sec. at f/8 in Manual mode. AWB.

I selected and AF point that was three AF points to the right and one row up from the center AF point/AI Servo Expand/Rear Focus AF as framed was active at the moment of exposure (as is always best when hand holding). See the exact placement of the selected AF point in the DPP 4 screen capture below.

Laughing Gull molting to first winter plumage–resting

Heavenly Rest…

This young Laughing Gull, molting into first winter plumage, was quite the cooperative subject. I photographed it while standing at full height, while seated, and while lying down in the soft sand. (I think that “lying” is correct but despite spending hours trying to understand lie versus lay along with the conjugations I am in no way sure that “lying” is correct…) All of the light brown feathers edged in white are the worn juvenile feathers. The few grey feathers–I am not sure if they are greater coverts or scapulars (or both)–are fresh, newly grown feathers. When the molt is complete in a few weeks the bird will exhibit the classic grey saddled look of first winter plumage as seen in many gull, tern, and shorebird species in fall and early winter.

While seated I was able to see the legs completely; the feet were obscured by the shallow water. I love the in heaven look that we see here. You can put any beach bird in heaven by getting low enough to include some out-of-focus sand in the foreground.

The Strengths of This Image

1- Having the bird perfectly parallel to the back of the camera is a big plus for me. When birds are resting like this or even when fully asleep they are constantly angling their body this way and that, sort of teetering from side to side. Once you have the framing that you want be sure to create lots of images quickly so that you wind up with a perfect subject to sensor plane orientation.

2- With about 2 1/2 times as much space from the tip of the tail to the left frame-edge as there is from the front of the breast to the right frame-edge the side to side framing is perfect.

3-And the same goes for the top to bottom framing with just a bit more room from the top of the head to the upper frame-edge than from the spot where the legs disappear to the bottom frame-edge.

4-The soft light and partially opened eye are both pluses, as is just the hint of the bird’s bill.

5- I did my best to avoid breaking waves in the background and succeeded admirably to that end with this frame. That is another reason to create lots of images once everything looks good…

Your Call…

Would you have framed this image differently? If yes, in what what way and why?


dpp4-lagu-1st-wint

The DPP 4 Screen Capture for today’s featured image

The DPP 4 Screen Capture For Today’s Featured Image

In this case I might have been better off selecting the upper right-most AF point and putting it squarely on the bird’s eye but was worried that it might have negatively affected the image design. Instead, I chose to put the selected AF point on the bird’s upper back at a point that was on the same plane as its eye. Note also the pretty much perfect histogram. Lastly, as the image was on the warm side with more R than G and B, I moved the color Fine Tuner away from red. This gave me bluer water in the background.

After converting the image in DPP 4 I brought the image into Photoshop, applied my NIK Color Efex Pro 25/25 recipe to the bird only after selecting it with the Quick Selection Tool, and add a bit of a Contrast Mask as well. After adding a Regular Layer Mask I erased 66% of the effect (with two passes of a 33% opacity brush) from the bird’s face to keep it from looking to crunchy. Everything above plus tons more is of course detailed in my Digital Basics File, an instructional PDF that is sent via e-mail. It includes my complete (former PC) digital workflow, dozens of great Photoshop tips, details on using all of my image clean-up tools, the use of Contrast Masks, several different ways of expanding and filling in canvas, all of my time-saving Keyboard Shortcuts, the basics of Quick Masking, Layer Masking, and NIK Color Efex Pro, Digital Eye Doctor techniques, using Gaussian Blurs, Dodge and Burn, a variety of ways to make selections, how to create time-saving actions, and tons more.


fort-desoto-card

DeSoto in spring is rife with tame and attractive birds. From upper left clockwise to center: breeding plumage Dunlin, dark morph breeding plumage Reddish Egret displaying, breeding plumage Laughing Gull/front end vertical portrait, breeding plumage Laughing Gull with prey item, Laughing Gull on head of Brown Pelican, screaming Royal Tern in breeding plumage, Royal Terns/pre-copulatory stand, Laughing Gulls copulating, breeding plumage Laughing Gull/tight horizontal portrait, Sandwich Tern with fish, and a really rare one, White-rumped Sandpiper in breeding plumage, photographed at DeSoto in early May.

Fort DeSoto Spring IPT/April 19-22, 2017. (meet & greet at 2pm on Wednesday April 19 followed by an afternoon session) through the full day on Saturday April 22. 3 1/2 DAYs: $1599. Limit 10. I will be offering small group (Limit 3) Photoshop sessions on Sunday afternoon and Monday morning if necessary. Details on that TBA.

Fort DeSoto is one of the rare locations that might offer great bird photography 365 days a year. It shines in spring. There will Lots of tame birds including breeding plumage Laughing Gull and Royal and Sandwich Terns. With luck, we will get to photograph all of these species courting and copulating. There will be American Oystercatcher and Marbled Godwit plus sandpipers and plovers, some in full breeding plumage. Black-bellied Plover and Red Knot in stunning breeding plumage are possible. There will be lots of wading birds including Great and Snowy Egrets, both color morphs of Reddish Egret, Great Blue, Tricolored and Little Blue Heron, Yellow-crowned Night-Heron, and killer breeding plumage White Ibis. Roseate Spoonbill and Wood Stork are possible and likely. We should have lots of good flight photography with the gulls and terns and with Brown Pelican. Nesting Least Tern and nesting Wilson’s Plover are possible.

We will, weather permitting, enjoy 7 shooting sessions. As above, our first afternoon session will follow the meet and greet at 2pm on Wednesday April 19. For the next three days we will have two daily photo sessions. We will be on the beach early and usually be at lunch (included) by 11am. We will have three indoor sessions. At one we will review my images–folks learn a ton watching me choose my keepers and deletes–why keep this one and delete that one? The second will be a review of your images so that I can quickly learn where you need help. For those who bring their laptops to lunch I’d be glad to take a peek at an image or three. Day three will be a Photoshop session during which we will review my complete workflow and process an image or two in Photoshop after converting them in DPP. Afternoon sessions will generally run from 4:30pm till sunset. We photograph until sunset on the last day, Saturday, April 22. Please note that this is a get-your-feet and get-your-butt wet and sandy IPT. And that you can actually do the whole IPT with a 300 f/2.8L IS, a 400 f/4 ID DO lens with both TCs, or the equivalent Nikon gear. I will surely be using my 500 II as my big glass and have my 100-400 II on my shoulder.


fort-desoto-card-b

DeSoto in spring is rife with tame and attractive birds. From upper left clockwise to center: Laughing Gull in flight, adult Yellow-crowned Night-Heron, copulating Sandwich Terns, Roseate Spoonbill, Great Egret with reflection, Short-billed Dowitcher in breeding plumage, American Oystercatcher, breeding plumage Royal Tern, white morph Reddish Egret, and Snowy Egret marsh habitat shot.

What You Will Learn

You will learn to approach free and wild birds without disturbing them, to understand and predict bird behavior, to identify many species of shorebirds, to spot the good situations, to understand the effects of sky and wind conditions on bird photography, to choose the best perspective, to see and understand the light, to get the right exposure every time after making a single test exposure, and to design pleasing images by mastering your camera’s AF system. And you will learn how and why to work in Manual mode (even if you are scared of it).

The group will be staying at the Red Roof Inn, St. Petersburg: 4999 34th St. North, St Petersburg, FL 33714. The place is clean and quite inexpensive. Please e-mail for room block information. And please call Jim or Jennifer at 863-692-0906 to register. All will need to purchase an Annual Pass early on Tuesday afternoon so that we can enter the park at 6am and be in position for sunrise opportunities. The cost is $75, Seniors $55. Tight carpools will be needed and will reduce the per person Annual Pass costs. The cost of three lunches is included. Breakfasts are grab what you can on the go, and dinners are also on your own due to the fact that we will usually be getting back to the hotel at about 9pm. Non-photographer spouses, friends, or companions are welcome for $100/day, $350 for the whole IPT.

Please Remember to use my Affiliate Links and to Visit the New BAA Online Store 🙂

To show your appreciation for my continuing efforts here, we ask, as always, that you get in the habit of using my B&H affiliate links on the right side of the blog for all of your photo and electronics purchases. Please check the availability of all photographic accessories in the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store, especially the Mongoose M3.6 tripod head, Wimberley lens plates, Delkin flash cards and accessories, and LensCoat stuff.

As always, we sell only what I have used, have tested, and can depend on. We will not sell you junk. We know what you need to make creating great images easy and fun. And we are always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

I would of course appreciate your using our B&H affiliate links for all of your major gear, video, and electronic purchases. For the photographic stuff mentioned in the paragraph above we, and for everything else in the new store, we, meaning BAA, would of course greatly appreciate your business. Here is a huge thank you to the many who have been using our links on a regular basis and those who will be visiting the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store as well.

Facebook

Be sure to like and follow BAA on Facebook by clicking on the logo link upper right. Tanks a stack!

Typos

In all blog posts and Bulletins, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors. Just be right 🙂

October 19th, 2016

The Question Nobody Could Answer: Why Do You Need to Set a Low ISO in Blasting Highlights Situations?

What’s Up?

I am somewhere in South America. I hope that you are well. Jim and Jen are at the office most days to help you with your mail order needs and Instructional Photo-Tour sign-ups. I still need folks for San Diego, Japan, Galapagos, the Palouse, and the Bear Boat (Grizzly Cubs) trips. Among others 🙂 Please e-mail for couples and discount info for all of the above. Click here for complete IPT info.

I will have some internet access for all but 22 OCT thru 11 NOV while I am on the Sea Spirit. Best and great picture making, artie

Gear Questions and Advice

Too many folks attending IPTs and dozens of the folks 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… Please know that I am always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.


The Streak: 341!

Today’s blog post marks a totally insane, irrational, illogical, preposterous, absurd, completely ridiculous, unfathomable, silly, incomprehensible, what’s wrong with this guy?, makes-no-sense, 341 days in a row with a new educational blog post. There should be no end in sight until my big South America trip next fall. Or not… As always-–and folks have been doing a really great job recently–-please remember to use our B&H links for your major gear purchases. For best results use one of our many product-specific links; after clicking on one of those you can continue shopping with all subsequent purchases invisibly tracked to BAA. Your doing so is always greatly appreciated. Please remember: web orders only. And please remember also that if you are shopping for items that we carry in the new BAA Online Store (as noted in red at the close of this post below) we would appreciate your business.


marine-igauna-golden-silhouette-_y9c3379-punta-espinoza-galapagos-ecuador

This image was on the 2011 Galapagos Photo-Cruise of a Lifetime with the Induro GIT 304/Mongoose M3.6-mounted Canon EF 800mm f/5.6L IS USM lens and the 1D Mark IV (now replaced by the rugged, blazingly fast Canon EOS-1D X Mark II.) ISO 200. Evaluative metering -2 2/3 stops: 1/5000 sec. at f/13. WB 8,000K.

Center AF point (by necessity)/AI Servo Expand/Rear Focus AF on the iguana’s face and recompose. Click here to see the latest version of the Rear Focus Tutorial.

Marine Iguana/blasting highlights

The 800mm f/5.6L IS USM Lens

The 800mm f/5.6L IS lens is still in production, and it is still a great piece of ass. I mean glass.

My Comments

One of the keys to success of blasting highlights images is to avoid having the head of the subject set against black or very dark portions of the background. I did that with success with today’s featured image above and with the two images from a previous blog post below.

As always, folks are referred to the section on Creating 11 a.m. Silhouettes in The Art of Bird Photography II (ABP II: 916 pages, 900+ images on CD only) to learn my suggested exposure compensation settings for true blasting highlights situations like the one above… Above note the relatively low ISO of 200, the high shutter speed or 1/5000 sec., the relatively small aperture of f/13, and the large degree of underexposure needed to keep from totally blowing out the specular highlights…


laughing-gull-blasting-highlights-_36a0107-fort-desoto-county-park-pinellas-fl

This image was created on the 2015 Fort DeSoto IPT with the Induro GIT 304L/Mongoose M3.6-mounted Canon EF 200-400mm f/4L IS USM Lens with Internal 1.4x Extender (with the 1.4X TC engaged at 513mm) and the best-ever digital camera body value, the Canon EOS 7D Mark II. ISO 100. Evaluative metering at zero: 1/400 sec. at f/11 in Tv mode. AWB.

65-point (Automatic selection)/AI Servo Surround/Rear Focus AF on the gull’s bill and re-compose. Click here to see the latest version of the Rear Focus Tutorial.

Image #1: Laughing Gull silhouette at f/11

Images Question

Why ISO 100?

Nobody Had a Clue…

Though many folks left a variety of answers to the Why ISO 100 question? in the (Not So) Blasting Highlights Intensity and Aperture Lessons… More Proof That the 7D Mark II Does Not Suck blog post here, nobody had a clue as to why I was at ISO 100 for the two featured images, despite my having directed them to the information:

(Not So) Blasting Highlights Intensity Lesson

Again, note that in The Art of Bird Photography II (ABP II: 916 pages, 900+ images on CD only) in the section on Creating 11 a.m. Silhouettes I detail the suggested exposure compensation settings for true blasting highlights situations. The backlight in the two images from the old blog post were both somewhat muted; this allowed me to work with much less negative ECs and at wider than typical apertures than I would in true blasting highlights situations. Compare this situation with the situation on the Galapagos above…

The Answer

Whenever I am faced with a blasting highlights situation, i.e., when I am shooting directly into the sun and into the specular highlights of said sun off the surface of the water, the first thing that I do is to lower the ISO. Why? Setting a lower than normal ISO will allow you to avoid the really small apertures the might lead to problems. And if you prefer a smoother rather than a more detailed look at the aforementioned specular highlights, it is often mandatory to choose a low ISO so that you can work close to the wide open aperture. Note the shutter speed (1/5000 sec.) and the aperture (f/13) in today’s featured image despite the relatively low ISO (200).


laughing-gull-bright-highlights-_36a0112-fort-desoto-county-park-pinellas-fl

This image was of course also created on the 2015 Fort DeSoto IPT with the Induro GIT 304L/Mongoose M3.6-mounted Canon EF 200-400mm f/4L IS USM Lens with Internal 1.4x Extender (with the 1.4X TC engaged at 519mm) and the best-ever digital camera body value, the Canon EOS 7D Mark II. ISO 100. Evaluative metering -1/3 stop: 1/1600 sec. at f/5.6 in Tv mode. AWB.

65-point (Automatic selection)/AI Servo/Rear Focus AF on the gull’s bill and re-compose. Click here to see the latest version of the Rear Focus Tutorial.

Image #2: Laughing Gull silhouette at f/5.6

(Not So) Blasting Highlights Aperture Lesson

By comparing today’s featured images you can see that with the smaller aperture in Image #1, f/11, that the specular highlights are much more sharply defined than the specular highlights in Image #2 that was created wide open at f/5.6. With higher ISOs it is not unusual to wind up at f/22 or f/32 in true blasting highlights situations.

Which look do you like better? Why?

My Preference…

Folks were–pretty much as I expected–about evenly divided on this question. I prefer the second of the two images, the one with the smoother background and the softer look of the specular highlights. But not by a wide margin. Note again that I higher ISO would have resulted in smaller apertures across the board which would have in turn left the specular highlights more sharply defined…

Please Remember to use my Affiliate Links and to Visit the New BAA Online Store 🙂

To show your appreciation for my continuing efforts here, we ask, as always, that you get in the habit of using my B&H affiliate links on the right side of the blog for all of your photo and electronics purchases. Please check the availability of all photographic accessories in the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store, especially the Mongoose M3.6 tripod head, Wimberley lens plates, Delkin flash cards and accessories, and LensCoat stuff.

As always, we sell only what I have used, have tested, and can depend on. We will not sell you junk. We know what you need to make creating great images easy and fun. And we are always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

I would of course appreciate your using our B&H affiliate links for all of your major gear, video, and electronic purchases. For the photographic stuff mentioned in the paragraph above we, and for everything else in the new store, we, meaning BAA, would of course greatly appreciate your business. Here is a huge thank you to the many who have been using our links on a regular basis and those who will be visiting the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store as well.

Facebook

Be sure to like and follow BAA on Facebook by clicking on the logo link upper right. Tanks a stack!

Typos

In all blog posts and Bulletins, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors. Just be right 🙂

October 18th, 2016

61- or 65- Point Automatic Selection AF Area Selection Mode Basics...

What’s Up?

I am somewhere in South America. I hope that you are well. Jim and Jen are at the office most days to help you with your mail order needs and Instructional Photo-Tour sign-ups. I still need folks for San Diego, Japan, Galapagos, the Palouse, and the Bear Boat (Grizzly Cubs) trips. Among others 🙂 Please e-mail for couples and discount info for all of the above. Click here for complete IPT info.

I will have internet access for all but 22 OCT thru 11 NOV while I am on the Sea Spirit. Best and great picture making, artie

Gear Questions and Advice

Too many folks attending BAA IPTs and dozens of the folks 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… Please know that I am always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.


The Streak: 340!

Today’s blog post marks a totally insane, irrational, illogical, preposterous, absurd, completely ridiculous, unfathomable, silly, incomprehensible, what’s wrong with this guy?, makes-no-sense, 340 days in a row with a new educational blog post. There should be no end in sight until my big South America trip next fall. Or not… As always-–and folks have been doing a really great job recently–-please remember to use our B&H links for your major gear purchases. For best results use one of our many product-specific links; after clicking on one of those you can continue shopping with all subsequent purchases invisibly tracked to BAA. Your doing so is always greatly appreciated. Please remember: web orders only. And please remember also that if you are shopping for items that we carry in the new BAA Online Store (as noted in red at the close of this post below) we would appreciate your business.


great-egret-juvenile-_28a2687-fort-desoto-county-park-fl

This image was created on my Fort Desoto scouting trip with the hand held Canon EF 400mm f/4 DO IS II USM lens, the Canon Extender EF 2X III, and the Canon EOS 5D Mark IV. ISO 400. Evaluative metering -1/3 stop: 1/800 sec. at f/11. AWB.

61-Point Automatic selection/AI Servo/Shutter Button AF as framed was active at the moment of exposure (as is always best when hand holding). See the screen capture below for the placement of the selected AF point.

Image #1: Great Egret juvenile/vertical head and neck portrait

61- or 65- Point Automatic Selection AF Area Selection Mode

When creating vertical head and shoulders portraits such as Image #1 above, the Automatic Selection AF Area Selection Mode is the way to go with all Canon camera bodies that feature it. Once you acquire focus the system will hold quite well and you will be free to create the composition you want.

Which is the Stronger Image?

Which is the stronger image, the vertical or the horizontal? Be sure to let us know why. In this case, my feeling is that there is a clear winner. What do you think?


great-egret-juvenile-horz-_28a2668-fort-desoto-county-park-fl

This image was created on my Fort Desoto scouting trip with the hand held Canon EF 400mm f/4 DO IS II USM lens, the Canon Extender EF 2X III, and the Canon EOS 5D Mark IV. ISO 400. Evaluative metering -1/3 stop: 1/800 sec. at f/11. AWB.

I selected the AF point that was one row to the left and three up from the center AF point/AI Servo/Expand/Shutter Button AF as originally framed was active at the moment of exposure (as is always best when hand holding). See the screen capture below for the placement of the selected AF point. This image was cropped a bit from above, the left, and below.

Image #2: Great Egret juvenile/horizontal head portrait

An Exception…

Normally when creating tight head portraits like Image #2, I would use 61- or 65- Point Automatic Selection as my AF Area Selection Mode for the reasons noted above: once you acquire AF will usually hold well as you re-frame. After getting close and using 61-point for the first series of images I decided to go with AF Expand and try to get the selected AF point right on the bird’s eye. Both approaches worked well but this was my favorite horizontal even though the subject was a bit too centered and a bit small in the frame. But the head angle was perfect with Image #2 just as it was in Image #1: about two degrees toward us.


greg-h-vs-v-scrn-capt

Side by Side DPP 4 Active AF Point Comparison

Side by Side DPP 4 Active AF Point Comparison

For the horizontal image here on the left, Image #2, I used AF Expand as shown and tried to get the selected AF point right on the bird’s eye. Even when the bird is standing completely still it is not that easy when hand holding at 800mm. Being on a tripod would have been a lot smarter. With Image #1, on the right here, I went with 61-Point with excellent results. Note that the AF system activated a cluster of AF points just forward of and below the eye and tracked the subject perfectly. Actually, I was moving a lot more than the bird; that is why you must use AI Servo AF with static subjects when hand holding…


fort-desoto-card

DeSoto in spring is rife with tame and attractive birds. From upper left clockwise to center: breeding plumage Dunlin, dark morph breeding plumage Reddish Egret displaying, breeding plumage Laughing Gull/front end vertical portrait, breeding plumage Laughing Gull with prey item, Laughing Gull on head of Brown Pelican, screaming Royal Tern in breeding plumage, Royal Terns/pre-copulatory stand, Laughing Gulls copulating, breeding plumage Laughing Gull/tight horizontal portrait, Sandwich Tern with fish, and a really rare one, White-rumped Sandpiper in breeding plumage, photographed at DeSoto in early May.

Fort DeSoto Spring IPT/April 19-22, 2017. (meet & greet at 2pm on Wednesday April 19 followed by an afternoon session) through the full day on Saturday April 22. 3 1/2 DAYs: $1599. Limit 10. I will be offering small group (Limit 3) Photoshop sessions on Sunday afternoon and Monday morning if necessary. Details on that TBA.

Fort DeSoto is one of the rare locations that might offer great bird photography 365 days a year. It shines in spring. There will Lots of tame birds including breeding plumage Laughing Gull and Royal and Sandwich Terns. With luck, we will get to photograph all of these species courting and copulating. There will be American Oystercatcher and Marbled Godwit plus sandpipers and plovers, some in full breeding plumage. Black-bellied Plover and Red Knot in stunning breeding plumage are possible. There will be lots of wading birds including Great and Snowy Egrets, both color morphs of Reddish Egret, Great Blue, Tricolored and Little Blue Heron, Yellow-crowned Night-Heron, and killer breeding plumage White Ibis. Roseate Spoonbill and Wood Stork are possible and likely. We should have lots of good flight photography with the gulls and terns and with Brown Pelican. Nesting Least Tern and nesting Wilson’s Plover are possible.

We will, weather permitting, enjoy 7 shooting sessions. As above, our first afternoon session will follow the meet and greet at 2pm on Wednesday April 19. For the next three days we will have two daily photo sessions. We will be on the beach early and usually be at lunch (included) by 11am. We will have three indoor sessions. At one we will review my images–folks learn a ton watching me choose my keepers and deletes–why keep this one and delete that one? The second will be a review of your images so that I can quickly learn where you need help. For those who bring their laptops to lunch I’d be glad to take a peek at an image or three. Day three will be a Photoshop session during which we will review my complete workflow and process an image or two in Photoshop after converting them in DPP. Afternoon sessions will generally run from 4:30pm till sunset. We photograph until sunset on the last day, Saturday, April 22. Please note that this is a get-your-feet and get-your-butt wet and sandy IPT. And that you can actually do the whole IPT with a 300 f/2.8L IS, a 400 f/4 ID DO lens with both TCs, or the equivalent Nikon gear. I will surely be using my 500 II as my big glass and have my 100-400 II on my shoulder.


fort-desoto-card-b

DeSoto in spring is rife with tame and attractive birds. From upper left clockwise to center: Laughing Gull in flight, adult Yellow-crowned Night-Heron, copulating Sandwich Terns, Roseate Spoonbill, Great Egret with reflection, Short-billed Dowitcher in breeding plumage, American Oystercatcher, breeding plumage Royal Tern, white morph Reddish Egret, and Snowy Egret marsh habitat shot.

What You Will Learn

You will learn to approach free and wild birds without disturbing them, to understand and predict bird behavior, to identify many species of shorebirds, to spot the good situations, to understand the effects of sky and wind conditions on bird photography, to choose the best perspective, to see and understand the light, to get the right exposure every time after making a single test exposure, and to design pleasing images by mastering your camera’s AF system. And you will learn how and why to work in Manual mode (even if you are scared of it).

The group will be staying at the Red Roof Inn, St. Petersburg: 4999 34th St. North, St Petersburg, FL 33714. The place is clean and quite inexpensive. Please e-mail for room block information. And please call Jim or Jennifer at 863-692-0906 to register. All will need to purchase an Annual Pass early on Tuesday afternoon so that we can enter the park at 6am and be in position for sunrise opportunities. The cost is $75, Seniors $55. Tight carpools will be needed and will reduce the per person Annual Pass costs. The cost of three lunches is included. Breakfasts are grab what you can on the go, and dinners are also on your own due to the fact that we will usually be getting back to the hotel at about 9pm. Non-photographer spouses, friends, or companions are welcome for $100/day, $350 for the whole IPT.

Please Remember to use my Affiliate Links and to Visit the New BAA Online Store 🙂

To show your appreciation for my continuing efforts here, we ask, as always, that you get in the habit of using my B&H affiliate links on the right side of the blog for all of your photo and electronics purchases. Please check the availability of all photographic accessories in the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store, especially the Mongoose M3.6 tripod head, Wimberley lens plates, Delkin flash cards and accessories, and LensCoat stuff.

As always, we sell only what I have used, have tested, and can depend on. We will not sell you junk. We know what you need to make creating great images easy and fun. And we are always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

I would of course appreciate your using our B&H affiliate links for all of your major gear, video, and electronic purchases. For the photographic stuff mentioned in the paragraph above we, and for everything else in the new store, we, meaning BAA, would of course greatly appreciate your business. Here is a huge thank you to the many who have been using our links on a regular basis and those who will be visiting the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store as well.

Facebook

Be sure to like and follow BAA on Facebook by clicking on the logo link upper right. Tanks a stack!

Typos

In all blog posts and Bulletins, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors. Just be right 🙂

October 17th, 2016

Masked Boobies In Strange Places...

What’s Up?

I am somewhere in South America. I hope that you are well. Jim and Jen are at the office most days to help you with your mail order needs and Instructional Photo-Tour sign-ups. I still need folks for San Diego, Japan, Galapagos, the Palouse, and the Bear Boat (Grizzly Cubs) trips. Among others 🙂 Please e-mail for couples and discount info for all of the above. Click here for complete IPT info.

I will have internet access for all but 22 OCT thru 11 NOV while I am on the Sea Spirit. Best and great picture making, artie

Gear Questions and Advice

Too many folks attending BAA IPTs and dozens of the folks 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… Please know that I am always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.


The Streak: 339!

Today’s blog post marks a totally insane, irrational, illogical, preposterous, absurd, completely ridiculous, unfathomable, silly, incomprehensible, what’s wrong with this guy?, makes-no-sense, 339 days in a row with a new educational blog post. There should be no end in sight until my big South America trip next fall. Or not… As always-–and folks have been doing a really great job recently–-please remember to use our B&H links for your major gear purchases. For best results use one of our many product-specific links; after clicking on one of those you can continue shopping with all subsequent purchases invisibly tracked to BAA. Your doing so is always greatly appreciated. Please remember: web orders only. And please remember also that if you are shopping for items that we carry in the new BAA Online Store (as noted in red at the close of this post below) we would appreciate your business.


masked-booby-wing-stretch-_r7a4143-la-jolla-ca

This image was created on the 2016 San Diego IPT with the Induro GIT 304L/Mongoose M3.6-mounted Canon EF 500mm f/4L IS II USM lens, the Canon Extender EF 1.4X III, and the mega mega-pixel Canon EOS 5DS R. ISO 800. Evaluative metering +1/3 stop (should have been at least +1 stop): 1/80 sec. at f/8. Cloudy WB. Fill flash at -3 stops with the Better Beamer (should have been -1 stop).

65-Point Automatic selection/AI Servo/Rear Focus AF as framed was active at the moment of exposure. The AF system performed perfectly activating two AF points on and just in front of the bird’s eye. Click here to see the latest version of the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to see a larger version.

Masked Booby–juvenile stretching wing

Juvenile Masked Booby

I photographed an adult Masked Booby in La Jolla a zillion years ago on film. Back then it was a really rare bird in San Diego and hundreds of folks came to see it and check it off their life lists. Listing is a big deal for many California birders. The image wound up on the cover of what I believe was and probably still is the Western Field Ornithologist’s quarterly magazine. IAC, in recent years, juvenile birds of this species show up every year. It is always fun to spot them on the cliff and try to figure out the very best perspective. They like to tuck themselves well in on the rocky ledges. To photograph this one I was shooting down on the bird at a steep angle. Once I had the image framed the bird obliged with a nice wing stretch and a stare right at me.

Before and After

After converting the RAW file well lighter in DPP 4 I brought the image into Photoshop. A small crop from the left and above was no problem for the sharp 5DS R file. Cliff clean-up was done primarily with the Patch Tool and the Spot Healing Brush. I selected the bird carefully with the Quick Selection Tool, feathered the selection, and then saved it. Then I put it on its own layer and ran a layer of my NIK 25/25 recipe. Note the positive effect on the brown feathers. Then I followed Arash’s NeatImage noise reduction tutorial from the Professional Guide to Post Processing to a tee with just a small amount (the Y slider set to 50) and applied that amount of NR twice to the background.

Everything above plus tons more is of course detailed in my Digital Basics File, an instructional PDF that is sent via e-mail. It includes my complete (former PC) digital workflow, dozens of great Photoshop tips, details on using all of my image clean-up tools, the use of Contrast Masks, several different ways of expanding and filling in canvas, all of my time-saving Keyboard Shortcuts, the basics of Quick Masking, Layer Masking, and NIK Color Efex Pro, Digital Eye Doctor techniques, using Gaussian Blurs, Dodge and Burn, a variety of ways to make selections, how to create time-saving actions, and tons more.


san-diego-card-neesie

San Diego offers a wealth of very attractive natural history subjects. With annual visits spanning more than three decades I have lot of experience there….

2017 San Diego 4 1/2-DAY BIRDS AS ART Instructional Photo-Tour (IPT) JAN 11 thru and including the morning session on JAN 15: 4 1/2 days: $1999.

(Limit: 10/openings 8)

Meet and Greet at 7:00pm on the evening before the IPT begins; Tuesday 1/10/17.

Join me in San Diego to photograph the spectacular breeding plumage Brown Pelicans with their fire-engine red and olive green bill pouches; Brandt’s and Double-crested Cormorants; breeding plumage Wood and Ring-necked Duck; other duck species possible including Lesser Scaup, Redhead, and Surf Scoter; a variety of gulls including Western, California, and the gorgeous Heerman’s, all in full breeding plumage; shorebirds including Marbled Godwit, Willet, Sanderling and Black-bellied Plover; many others possible including Least, Western, and Spotted Sandpiper, Whimbrel, Black and Ruddy Turnstone, Semipalmated Plover, and Surfbird; Harbor Seals (depending on the current regulations) and California Sea Lions; and Bird of Paradise flowers. And as you can see by studying the two IPT cards there are some nice bird-scape and landscape opportunities as well.

With gorgeous subjects just sitting there waiting to have their pictures taken, photographing the pelicans on the cliffs is about as easy as nature photography gets. With the winds from the east almost every morning there is usually some excellent flight photography. And the pelicans are almost always doing something interesting: preening, scratching, bill pouch cleaning, or squabbling. And then there are those crazy head throws that are thought to be a form of intra-flock communication.

Did I mention that there are wealth of great birds and natural history subjects in San Diego in winter?


san-diego-card-b

Though the pelicans will be the stars of the show on this IPT there will be many other handsome and captivating subjects in wonderful settings.

The San Diego Details

This IPT will include five 3 1/2 hour morning photo sessions, four 2 1/2 hour afternoon photo sessions, four lunches, and after-lunch image review and Photoshop sessions. To ensure early starts, breakfasts will be your responsibility.

A $599 non-refundable deposit is required to hold your slot for this IPT. You can send a check (made out to “Arthur Morris) to us at BIRDS AS ART, PO Box 7245, Indian Lake Estates, FL, 33855. Or call Jim or Jennifer at the office with a credit card at 863-692-0906. Your balance, payable only by check, will be due on 9/11//2016. If we do not receive your check for the balance on or before the due date we will try to fill your spot from the waiting list. Please print, complete, and sign the form that is linked to here and shoot it to us along with your deposit check. If you register by phone, please print, complete and sign the form as noted above and either mail it to us or e-mail the scan. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact me via e-mail.

Please Remember to use my Affiliate Links and to Visit the New BAA Online Store 🙂

To show your appreciation for my continuing efforts here, we ask, as always, that you get in the habit of using my B&H affiliate links on the right side of the blog for all of your photo and electronics purchases. Please check the availability of all photographic accessories in the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store, especially the Mongoose M3.6 tripod head, Wimberley lens plates, Delkin flash cards and accessories, and LensCoat stuff.

As always, we sell only what I have used, have tested, and can depend on. We will not sell you junk. We know what you need to make creating great images easy and fun. And we are always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

I would of course appreciate your using our B&H affiliate links for all of your major gear, video, and electronic purchases. For the photographic stuff mentioned in the paragraph above we, and for everything else in the new store, we, meaning BAA, would of course greatly appreciate your business. Here is a huge thank you to the many who have been using our links on a regular basis and those who will be visiting the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store as well.

Facebook

Be sure to like and follow BAA on Facebook by clicking on the logo link upper right. Tanks a stack!

Typos

In all blog posts and Bulletins, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors. Just be right 🙂

October 16th, 2016

South America Trip Gear Bag

What’s Up?

I am somewhere in South America. I hope that you are well. Jim and Jen are at the office most days to help you with your mail order needs and Instructional Photo-Tour sign-ups. I still need folks for San Diego, Japan, Galapagos, the Palouse, and the Bear Boat (Grizzly Cubs) trips. Among others 🙂 Please e-mail for couples and discount info for all of the above. Click here for complete IPT info.

I will have internet access for all but 22 OCT thru 11 NOV while I am on the Sea Spirit. Best and great picture making, artie


Gear Questions and Advice

Too many folks attending BAA IPTs and dozens of the folks 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… Please know that I am always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

The Streak: 338!

Today’s blog post marks a totally insane, irrational, illogical, preposterous, absurd, completely ridiculous, unfathomable, silly, incomprehensible, what’s wrong with this guy?, makes-no-sense, 338 days in a row with a new educational blog post. There should be no end in sight until my big South America trip next fall. Or not… As always-–and folks have been doing a really great job recently–-please remember to use our B&H links for your major gear purchases. For best results use one of our many product-specific links; after clicking on one of those you can continue shopping with all subsequent purchases invisibly tracked to BAA. Your doing so is always greatly appreciated. Please remember: web orders only. And please remember also that if you are shopping for items that we carry in the new BAA Online Store (as noted in red at the close of this post below) we would appreciate your business.

My South America Trip Gear Bag/Going Relatively Light

On my first trip to the Southern Ocean everyone told me I was nuts to bring my 500. Until they saw the images. On my next trip about four years later I dropped down to the Canon EF 200-400mm f/4L IS USM lens with Internal 1.4x Extender and did quite well. More recently the trend was to the Canon EF 300mm f/2.8L IS II USM lens with both TCs. This year I was planning on going with the Canon EF 400mm f/4 DO IS II USM lens as my “big glass” with both TCs of course. But after having so much fun at DeSoto recently with the Canon EF 500mm f/4L IS II USM lens I decided to bring the 500 II as my big lens and the 400 DO II for flight photography (especially from the ship along with the 1.4X III TC) and as a big lens back-up.

It was light years easier working with the 500 II on the beach than with the 600 II. And the 500 II will serve me well on the two land-based Falklands trips, on the coast of Peru, and in the jungles of Peru as well. The 600 lenses might be best left for the young and the strong and the truly focal-length-hungry. As each day goes by, weight becomes a more important factor when choosing what gear I will travel with.

Next up of course is the world’s premier penguin lens, the Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM lens. This lens absolutely kills on tame birds and wildlife and as everyone here knows, I love its amazing close focusing capabilities. All while making a pretty darned good flight lens especially on the Falklands.

For my b-roll short zoom I will am taking the Canon EF 24-105mm f/4L IS USM “don’t leave home without it” lens soon to be replaced (but not soon enough to make this trip) by the Canon EF 24-105mm f/4L IS II USM lens.

That was it for lenses until I realized that I could not get by with two checked bags so at the very last minute I threw in the small and light Canon EF 70-200mm f/4L IS USM lens just in case I feel strong enough to make it up near the top of Salisbury Plain one more time in this life. I’ve only been up once … And that was quickly followed by the Canon EF 16-35mm f/4L IS USM lens. Again, this one was taken with one day in mind: St. Andrews Bay. Though I am not very good with wide angle lenses I have made a few good ones at this spectacular location that is actually more spectacular in January than it is earlier in the season.

Camera Bodies

Boy, things have changed here rapidly.

My two main camera bodies will both be the Canon EOS 5D Mark IV. I do not plan on using my Canon EOS-1D X Mark II a whole lot except possibly when doing flight photography from the stern of the ship.

TCs

I am making this trip with two Canon 1.4X III TCs and two 2X III TCs.

Flash Stuff

I will be bringing my flash gear for the tanagers and hummingbirds in the cloud forests of Peru. Though I would love to have a high speed flash hummer set-up along taking all that gear is just not feasible. I am taking two Canon Speedlite 600EX-RT flashes, two Canon OC-E3 Off Camera Shoe Cords,(2′) two Mongoose Integrated Flash Arms, and two Better Beamers.

Having the flash mounted on a bracket well above the camera will reduce but usually not completely eliminate red-eye, flash-eye, steel eye, purple eye with birds and green eye with many mammals. With the flash mounted on camera the light from the flash reflects off the subject’s retina causing a variety of problems. Using a Better Beamer concentrates the light from the flash and yields an increase in flash output of about 2 2/3 stops, allows you to work at greater distances with smaller apertures, reduces battery drain, weighs just 2 1/2 ounces, and holds the Fresnel lens in place with no sagging or flopping. It fits in your pocket and set up and removal is quick and easy.) To learn about flash as main light, fill flash, and manual flash, see the Flash Simplified section in The Art of Bird Photography II (ABP II: 916 pages, 900+ images on CD only).

Questions Welcome

If you have a question about any of my gear choices above or below, please feel free to leave a comment.

Think Tank Rolling Bags

I will be using the larger of my two Think Tank rolling bags, the Airport Security™ V 2.0 Rolling Camera Bag. It tipped the scales at 43 1/2 pounds for this trip; the legal limit for US flights is 40 pounds. And it is a a lot less on many if the South American legs … Nearly all countries in the world give you slack as far as the 40 pounds goes on the way back to the US. As far as the extra 3 1/2 pounds, I have only been hassled for weight once in more than three decades of flying around the world …. I hope that I do not give myself a kine-ahora this time.

Think Tank Urban Disguise Laptop Shoulder Bag

I love this amazing bag as it has tons of room, enables me to bring tons of extra stuff, and even lets me stow a lens or two if I get busted at the gate for my vert or for an overweight carryon.

Please click on my Think Tank affiliate link here to earn a free gift when you purchase a Think Tank Rolling Bag.

Delkin Flash Cards

As always, I will have a 64gb Delkin e-Film Pro Flash Card in each camera body so that I never have to change cards in the field thus reducing the risk of losing a card…. Please note the new lower prices here. I do have a few extra 32 and 64gb cards in a Delkin CF Memory Card Tote, mostly to protect against operator error …

XtraHand Vest

I use a custom-designed XtraHand Magnum Vest that John Storrie knows as the BIRDS AS ART Big Lens Vest. It is based on their Magnum vest. The vest is a godsend both when traveling and in the field at many locations. It will make every landing with me on South Georgia and the Falklands on the CES Expedition and on every land-based Falklands outing as well. When traveling by air, it can save you if you get busted at the gate …

If you do a search for for “vest’ or “vested interest” or “xtrahand” in the little white box on the upper right side of each blog page, it will take you to many mentions in both the blog and the Bulletins with lots of additional info. See especially here and here.

Once you call John you can discuss customizing your vest. Be sure to have a tape measure in hand. Please let him know that I sent you .

Website: http://www.vestedinterest.com/

John Storrie e-mail: jstorrie@vestedinterest.com

U.S. Only: 1 800 928 0157
Outside U.S.: 1+ 940 484 2222

Please Remember to use my Affiliate Links and to Visit the New BAA Online Store 🙂

To show your appreciation for my continuing efforts here, we ask, as always, that you get in the habit of using my B&H affiliate links on the right side of the blog for all of your photo and electronics purchases. Please check the availability of all photographic accessories in the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store, especially the Mongoose M3.6 tripod head, Wimberley lens plates, Delkin flash cards and accessories, and LensCoat stuff.

As always, we sell only what I have used, have tested, and can depend on. We will not sell you junk. We know what you need to make creating great images easy and fun. And we are always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

I would of course appreciate your using our B&H affiliate links for all of your major gear, video, and electronic purchases. For the photographic stuff mentioned in the paragraph above we, and for everything else in the new store, we, meaning BAA, would of course greatly appreciate your business. Here is a huge thank you to the many who have been using our links on a regular basis and those who will be visiting the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store as well.

Facebook

Be sure to like and follow BAA on Facebook by clicking on the logo link upper right. Tanks a stack!

Typos

In all blog posts and Bulletins, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors. Just be right 🙂

October 15th, 2016

Shrimp

What’s Up?

I got out for some photography on Friday, mostly Peruvian Pelicans on the coast west of Santiago. It is Friday afternoon and I feel great. I fly with my group of three to the Falklands tomorrow for a week of land-based bird photography heaven. Did get rain jacket and a pair of rain pants with a zipper fly! Talk about a big step up.

I will be off line for from four to seven days. Till then, best and great picture making, artie


Gear Questions and Advice

Too many folks attending BAA IPTs and dozens of the folks 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… Please know that I am always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

The Streak: 337!

Today’s blog post marks a totally insane, irrational, illogical, preposterous, absurd, completely ridiculous, unfathomable, silly, incomprehensible, what’s wrong with this guy?, makes-no-sense, 337 days in a row with a new educational blog post. There should be no end in sight until my big South America trip next fall. Or not… As always-–and folks have been doing a really great job recently–-please remember to use our B&H links for your major gear purchases. For best results use one of our many product-specific links; after clicking on one of those you can continue shopping with all subsequent purchases invisibly tracked to BAA. Your doing so is always greatly appreciated. Please remember: web orders only. And please remember also that if you are shopping for items that we carry in the new BAA Online Store (as noted in red at the close of this post below) we would appreciate your business.

Selling Your Used Gear Through BIRDS AS ART

Selling your used (or like-new) photo gear through the BAA Blog or via a BAA Online Bulletin is a great idea. We charge only a 5% commission. One of the more popular used gear for sale sites charges a minimum of 20%. Plus assorted fees! Yikes. The minimum item price here is $500 (or less for a $25 fee). If you are interested please e-mail with the words Items for Sale Info Request cut and pasted into the Subject line :). Stuff that is priced fairly–I offer free pricing advice, usually sells in no time flat. In the past few months, we have sold just about everything in sight. Do know that prices on some items like the EOS-1D Mark IV, the old Canon 500mm, the EOS-7D, and the original 400mm IS DO lens have been dropping steadily. You can see all current listings by clicking here or by clicking on the Used Photo Gear tab on the yellow-orange tab on the right side of the menu bar above.

SEPT/OCTUsed Gear Sales Continue to be Flaming Hot!

  • Bob Serling sold his Canon EF 300mm f/2.8L IS II USM lens in near-mint condition for $4449 and his older, Canon EF300mm f/2.8L IS lens in excellent plus condition for the shock-the-world price of $2399 within a day or three of listing them here. Why? He wanted to sell them and listened to my pricing advice.
  • Multiple IPT veteran Larry Master sold his Canon EOS 24-105mm f/4 L IS lens in excellent condition for $549 to a private buyer.
  • Joseph Higbee sold a Canon EF 2X III Extender in excellent condition for $349 an hour after it was listed on September 26. Soon thereafter he sold a Canon EF 70-200mm f2.8L IS II USM lens in excellent condition for $1449 and a Canon EOS 7D in excellent condition for $299.
  • In less than one day in late September Steve Zarate sold his Canon EOS 7D camera in very good condition for a BAA record low price of $279 and his Canon EOS 7D II in excellent condition for a BAA record low price of $799.
  • Within two days of listing Joe Alexander sold his Canon EF 100-400mm L IS USM lens in excellent plus condition for $599 in late September when he also sold one of each of these: Canon EF 1.4x III and Canon EF 2x III Extender in excellent plus condition for $249 each within an hour of listing them. When he first contacted me he had them priced, way, way, way too low…
  • Yours truly, Arthur Morris, sold one of his two Canon EOS 5DS R bodies in excellent condition but for a very small, very fine sort of x-shaped crack in the upper-right corner of the top LCD screen, for $2549 in late September.
  • Doug Rogers sold his Vortex Razor 85mm Ultra High Definition Scope in like-new condition for $795.00 in mid-September.
  • Ed Hutchinson sold his Canon EF 100-400mm L IS USM lens, the “old 1-4,” in like-new condition for $649 and his EOS 5D Mark III in like-new condition for $1499 within days of listing them in mid-September.
  • Hisham Atallah sold his Canon 600mm f/4L IS II lens in excellent condition for $9499 in mid-September within days of listing it.
  • Good friend and BAA Japan IPT co-leader–the oft-honored BBC and Nature’s Best photographer Paul McKenzie–sold his Canon EOS 1DX in excellent condition with an extra Canon battery for $2299 in mid September two days after it was listed.
  • Eric Karl sold his Canon EF 200-400mm f/4L IS USM Lens with Internal Extender in excellent condition for the full asking price, a very low $8,099 in mid-September.
  • Gary Meyer sold his Canon EOS 5D Mark III in mint condition for $1599 with an off-brand battery grip in mid-September.

New Listings

Canon EOS-1DX Mark II

Multiple IPT veteran Larry Master is offering a Canon EOS-1DX Mark II in like-new condition for $5399. The sale includes all original materials (manual, battery pack, charger, eyecup, strap, and interface cable & protector) in the original box plus an extra battery, and insured ground shipping via FEDEX or UPS to US addresses only. The lens will not ship until your check clears unless other arrangements are made.

Please contact Larry via e-mail or by phone at 1-518-645-1545 (Eastern time).

The rugged, blazingly fast EOS-1DX Mark II is Canon’s flagship professional dSLR. Check out what it can do in the hands of a skill flight photographer like Arash Hazeghi by clicking here. artie

Canon EOS-1D Mark IV

Kim Barley is offering a Canon EOS-1D Mark IV in excellent condition for a BAA record-low $1278. The sale includes the strap, the body cap, and insured ground shipping via Fed-Ex. The camera will not ship until your check clears unless other arrangements are made.

Please contact Kim via e-mail or by phone at 1-321-972-8014.

I used and depended on two 1D Mark IVs as my workhorse camera bodies for nearly four years. I loved the great AF system, the quality image files, and the now gone forever 1.3 crop factor. If you want a pro body for a low, low price, this 1D IV is for you. artie


roseate-spoonbill-catching-shrimp_p3a0701-fort-desoto-county-park-fl

This image was created on the morning of the last day of the Fort Desoto Fall IPT with the Induro GIT 304L/Mongoose M3.6-mounted Canon EF 500mm f/4L IS II USM lens, the Canon Extender EF 1.4X III, and the Canon EOS 5D Mark IV. ISO 800. Evaluative metering at zero: 1/1000 sec. at f/5.6 (Was about a one stop underexposure). Daylight WB (converted at Cloudy WB).

I selected the AF point that was two rows above and one to the right of the center AF point/AI Servo Expand/Rear Focus AF as framed. It was active at the moment of exposure and fell on a spot just in front of the bend of the bird’s wing.

LensAlign/FocusTune micro-adjustment: 0

Roseate Spoonbill catching shrimp

Shrimp

As mentioned here previously, we enjoyed a great feeding spree on the last morning of the DeSoto IPT with several species of wading birds and several dozen Laughing Gulls dining on shrimp and what looked like leeches or some type of larval fish. Though the birds were easily approached the cloudy-dark conditions made things challenging. Note that even with the dark background working at 0 EC the image was about a stop underexposed.

The Image Optimization and Clean-up

After adding one stop of light while doing the RAW conversion in DPP 4, I cleaned up some large specular highlights using the Clone Stamp Tool and the Patch Tool but left most of the water drops. The most notable one in this 100% crop is just below the bill on our right. The specular highlight behind the shrimp’s tail was covered with a small Quick Mask and refined with a Regular Layer Mask. I did some Eye Doctor work but my first attempt the results were crude so I used the Quick Mask from the Original Background Copy Trick to “start again.” I am not sure if I published the blog post with that tutorial or if it is in the queue to be published when I am offline in South America.

Why The Noisy 5D IV Background?

The RAW file was underexposed one full stop and thus the dark tones of the background were about 2 2/3 stops stops underexposed. If that confuses you study the section on Exposure Theory in the original The Art of Bird Photography–the principles are the same today on film as they were with film) And while dark backgrounds will always show more noise than light ones the additional one stop of underexposure creates additional noise.

NeatImage Noise Reduction

NeatImage noise reduction is amazing and when combined with Arash’s new masking techniques where you apply only a small amount of NR to the subject and a larger amount of NR to the background so as to avoid destroying fine detail in the subject it is amazingly effective. You can see for yourself that the noise reduction is superb. And only NeatImage builds a noise reduction profile for each individual image. You can learn these techniques in our Professional Guide to Post Processing. A separate purchase of NeatImage v7.6 is required. Do not purchase v8 or any subsequent version as the interface is new (and v7.6 is superb as is).

At present, it is imperative that folks purchasing NeatImage use only the custom-designed links below to purchase v7.6:

1. v7 Pro plug-in for Photoshop (Windows), $79.90 (excl. possible taxes): please click here.

2. v7 Pro plug-in for Photoshop (Mac OSX), $79.90 (excl. possible taxes): please click here.


fort-desoto-card

DeSoto in spring is rife with tame and attractive birds. From upper left clockwise to center: breeding plumage Dunlin, dark morph breeding plumage Reddish Egret displaying, breeding plumage Laughing Gull/front end vertical portrait, breeding plumage Laughing Gull with prey item, Laughing Gull on head of Brown Pelican, screaming Royal Tern in breeding plumage, Royal Terns/pre-copulatory stand, Laughing Gulls copulating, breeding plumage Laughing Gull/tight horizontal portrait, Sandwich Tern with fish, and a really rare one, White-rumped Sandpiper in breeding plumage, photographed at DeSoto in early May.

Fort DeSoto Spring IPT/April 19-22, 2017. (meet & greet at 2pm on Wednesday April 19 followed by an afternoon session) through the full day on Saturday April 22. 3 1/2 DAYs: $1599. Limit 10. I will be offering small group (Limit 3) Photoshop sessions on Sunday afternoon and Monday morning if necessary. Details on that TBA.

Fort DeSoto is one of the rare locations that might offer great bird photography 365 days a year. It shines in spring. There will Lots of tame birds including breeding plumage Laughing Gull and Royal and Sandwich Terns. With luck, we will get to photograph all of these species courting and copulating. There will be American Oystercatcher and Marbled Godwit plus sandpipers and plovers, some in full breeding plumage. Black-bellied Plover and Red Knot in stunning breeding plumage are possible. There will be lots of wading birds including Great and Snowy Egrets, both color morphs of Reddish Egret, Great Blue, Tricolored and Little Blue Heron, Yellow-crowned Night-Heron, and killer breeding plumage White Ibis. Roseate Spoonbill and Wood Stork are possible and likely. We should have lots of good flight photography with the gulls and terns and with Brown Pelican. Nesting Least Tern and nesting Wilson’s Plover are possible.

We will, weather permitting, enjoy 7 shooting sessions. As above, our first afternoon session will follow the meet and greet at 2pm on Wednesday April 19. For the next three days we will have two daily photo sessions. We will be on the beach early and usually be at lunch (included) by 11am. We will have three indoor sessions. At one we will review my images–folks learn a ton watching me choose my keepers and deletes–why keep this one and delete that one? The second will be a review of your images so that I can quickly learn where you need help. For those who bring their laptops to lunch I’d be glad to take a peek at an image or three. Day three will be a Photoshop session during which we will review my complete workflow and process an image or two in Photoshop after converting them in DPP. Afternoon sessions will generally run from 4:30pm till sunset. We photograph until sunset on the last day, Saturday, April 22. Please note that this is a get-your-feet and get-your-butt wet and sandy IPT. And that you can actually do the whole IPT with a 300 f/2.8L IS, a 400 f/4 ID DO lens with both TCs, or the equivalent Nikon gear. I will surely be using my 500 II as my big glass and have my 100-400 II on my shoulder.


fort-desoto-card-b

DeSoto in spring is rife with tame and attractive birds. From upper left clockwise to center: Laughing Gull in flight, adult Yellow-crowned Night-Heron, copulating Sandwich Terns, Roseate Spoonbill, Great Egret with reflection, Short-billed Dowitcher in breeding plumage, American Oystercatcher, breeding plumage Royal Tern, white morph Reddish Egret, and Snowy Egret marsh habitat shot.

What You Will Learn

You will learn to approach free and wild birds without disturbing them, to understand and predict bird behavior, to identify many species of shorebirds, to spot the good situations, to understand the effects of sky and wind conditions on bird photography, to choose the best perspective, to see and understand the light, to get the right exposure every time after making a single test exposure, and to design pleasing images by mastering your camera’s AF system. And you will learn how and why to work in Manual mode (even if you are scared of it).

The group will be staying at the Red Roof Inn, St. Petersburg: 4999 34th St. North, St Petersburg, FL 33714. The place is clean and quite inexpensive. Please e-mail for room block information. And please call Jim or Jennifer at 863-692-0906 to register. All will need to purchase an Annual Pass early on Tuesday afternoon so that we can enter the park at 6am and be in position for sunrise opportunities. The cost is $75, Seniors $55. Tight carpools will be needed and will reduce the per person Annual Pass costs. The cost of three lunches is included. Breakfasts are grab what you can on the go, and dinners are also on your own due to the fact that we will usually be getting back to the hotel at about 9pm. Non-photographer spouses, friends, or companions are welcome for $100/day, $350 for the whole IPT.

Please Remember to use my Affiliate Links and to Visit the New BAA Online Store 🙂

To show your appreciation for my continuing efforts here, we ask, as always, that you get in the habit of using my B&H affiliate links on the right side of the blog for all of your photo and electronics purchases. Please check the availability of all photographic accessories in the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store, especially the Mongoose M3.6 tripod head, Wimberley lens plates, Delkin flash cards and accessories, and LensCoat stuff.

As always, we sell only what I have used, have tested, and can depend on. We will not sell you junk. We know what you need to make creating great images easy and fun. And we are always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

I would of course appreciate your using our B&H affiliate links for all of your major gear, video, and electronic purchases. For the photographic stuff mentioned in the paragraph above we, and for everything else in the new store, we, meaning BAA, would of course greatly appreciate your business. Here is a huge thank you to the many who have been using our links on a regular basis and those who will be visiting the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store as well.

Facebook

Be sure to like and follow BAA on Facebook by clicking on the logo link upper right. Tanks a stack!

Typos

In all blog posts and Bulletins, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors. Just be right 🙂

October 14th, 2016

Dan Cadieux's ISO 800 and Higher Canon EOS 7D Mark II Gallery--Part I

What’s Up?

After a great day’s rest I am getting up early to do the Inca Tern/Peruvian Pelican day trip. And purchase a rain top for the trip.


Gear Questions and Advice

Too many folks attending BAA IPTs and dozens of the folks 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… Please know that I am always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

The Streak: 336!

Today’s blog post marks a totally insane, irrational, illogical, preposterous, absurd, completely ridiculous, unfathomable, silly, incomprehensible, what’s wrong with this guy?, makes-no-sense, 336 days in a row with a new educational blog post. There should be no end in sight until my big South America trip next fall. Or not… As always-–and folks have been doing a really great job recently–-please remember to use our B&H links for your major gear purchases. For best results use one of our many product-specific links; after clicking on one of those you can continue shopping with all subsequent purchases invisibly tracked to BAA. Your doing so is always greatly appreciated. Please remember: web orders only. And please remember also that if you are shopping for items that we carry in the new BAA Online Store (as noted in red at the close of this post below) we would appreciate your business.


dc-1-500-f-5-6-iso-800

This image was created by Dan Cadieux with the hand held Canon EF 500mm f/4L IS II USM lens, the Canon Extender EF 1.4X III, and the greatest ever value in a digital DSLR, the Canon EOS 7D Mark II.

ISO 800

Image #1: Pectoral Sandpiper, juvenile in golden light.
Image copyright and courtesy of Daniel Cadieux

Thanks Dan!

Dan Cadieux, a Canadian federal government employee, lives with his wife Chantal in Ottawa Canada. He is the proud father of two boys and two girls and an avid bird/nature photographer in his free time. He is a skilled, hard-working moderator in the Avian Forum at Bird Photographers.Net. As of 1:54 pm on September 21, 2016 he had started 2928 threads and posted 20,903 comments. Many of his threads include one of his great images posted for critiquing. In most of the comments he is critiquing the work of others telling what he likes, what he does not like, and offering suggestions for improvement. He is an invaluable member of the BPN staff. You can learn more about Dan here.

You can see more of Dan’s old 7D images here and learn about his post-processing here, both on the BAA Blog.


dc-eastern-kb-1-640-5-6-1600-700mm

This image was created by Dan Cadieux with the hand held Canon EF 500mm f/4L IS II USM lens, the Canon Extender EF 1.4X III, and the greatest ever value in a digital DSLR, the Canon EOS 7D Mark II.

ISO 1600

Image #2: Eastern Kingbird, pair at nest.
Image copyright and courtesy of Daniel Cadieux

Today’s Cadieux Collection

Today’s collection of excellent and beautiful Dan Cadieux images were all created at ISOs of 800 or higher with the Canon EOS-7D Mark II, often noted as being very poor at the higher ISOs. How do Dan’s images look to you? Best advice: expose to the right! Remember, it ain’t the lens and it ain’t the camera body. It’s what’s in the head, mind, and heart of the person holding the gear.


dc-semi-1-1250-5-6-iso-800

This image was created by Dan Cadieux with the hand held Canon EF 500mm f/4L IS II USM lens, the Canon Extender EF 1.4X III, and the greatest ever value in a digital DSLR, the Canon EOS 7D Mark II.

ISO 800

Image #3: Semipalmated Sandpiper, juvenile.
Image copyright and courtesy of Daniel Cadieux

Your Favorite?

Please leave a comment letting us know which two of Dan’s images you like best. And feel free to leave a question for Dan.


dccedar-wax-700mm

This image was created by Dan Cadieux with the hand held Canon EF 500mm f/4L IS II USM lens, the Canon Extender EF 1.4X III, and the greatest ever value in a digital DSLR, the Canon EOS 7D Mark II.

ISO 800

Image #4: Cedar Waxwing, high key.
Image copyright and courtesy of Daniel Cadieux

Dan and the Old 7D

If you missed the gallery of Dan’s image created with the original notoriously bad Canon EOS 7D, you can view it here.


dcspotty-700mm-1-250-5-6-iso-1600

This image was created by Dan Cadieux with the hand held Canon EF 500mm f/4L IS II USM lens, the Canon Extender EF 1.4X III, and the greatest ever value in a digital DSLR, the Canon EOS 7D Mark II.

ISO 1600

Image #5: Spotted Sandpiper, juvenile teetering with tail raised
Image copyright and courtesy of Daniel Cadieux


semi-flap-1-125-f4-iso-1600

This image was created by Dan Cadieux with the hand held Canon EF 500mm f/4L IS II USM lens and the greatest ever value in a digital DSLR, the Canon EOS 7D Mark II.

ISO 1600

Image #6: Semipalmated Sandpiper, juvenile flapping after bath–high key.
Image copyright and courtesy of Daniel Cadieux


veery-700mm-1-160-5-6-1600

This image was created by Dan Cadieux with the hand held Canon EF 500mm f/4L IS II USM lens, the Canon Extender EF 1.4X III, and the greatest ever value in a digital DSLR, the Canon EOS 7D Mark II.

ISO 1600

Image #7: Veery.
Image copyright and courtesy of Daniel Cadieux


dcamerican-tree-sparrow-1600

This image was created by Dan Cadieux with the hand held Canon EF 500mm f/4L IS II USM lens, the Canon Extender EF 1.4X III, and the greatest ever value in a digital DSLR, the Canon EOS 7D Mark II.

ISO 1600

Image #8: American Tree Sparrow
copyright and courtesy of Daniel Cadieux


dcbohemian-waxwing-800

This image was created by Dan Cadieux with the hand held Canon EF 500mm f/4L IS II USM lens, the Canon Extender EF 1.4X III, and the greatest ever value in a digital DSLR, the Canon EOS 7D Mark II.

ISO 800

Image #9: Bohemian Waxwings
Copyright and courtesy of Daniel Cadieux

Please Remember to use my Affiliate Links and to Visit the New BAA Online Store 🙂

To show your appreciation for my continuing efforts here, we ask, as always, that you get in the habit of using my B&H affiliate links on the right side of the blog for all of your photo and electronics purchases. Please check the availability of all photographic accessories in the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store, especially the Mongoose M3.6 tripod head, Wimberley lens plates, Delkin flash cards and accessories, and LensCoat stuff.

As always, we sell only what I have used, have tested, and can depend on. We will not sell you junk. We know what you need to make creating great images easy and fun. And we are always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail.

I would of course appreciate your using our B&H affiliate links for all of your major gear, video, and electronic purchases. For the photographic stuff mentioned in the paragraph above we, and for everything else in the new store, we, meaning BAA, would of course greatly appreciate your business. Here is a huge thank you to the many who have been using our links on a regular basis and those who will be visiting the New BIRDS AS ART Online Store as well.

Facebook

Be sure to like and follow BAA on Facebook by clicking on the logo link upper right. Tanks a stack!

Typos

In all blog posts and Bulletins, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors. Just be right 🙂

October 13th, 2016

B&H Event Space Video: Putting Art (not me!) Into Your Nature Photography ... And two things I forgot to take to South America

What’s Up?

The redeye flight to Santiago, Chile was easy peasy. I slept as well as I ever have on a plane. But, the walk from the departure gate of my AA flight from Orlando to MIA to the gate (J18) for my Latam flight was one brutal hour. Moving walkways covered more than half of the distance. But more than half of them were out of order.

I met my group of three in the hotel lobby and sent them off to do the condors with my local guide. I went up to my room and rested–if you call lying in bed trying to do a crossword puzzle while in a coma resting. By 2:30pm I was feeling alive again and got to work on more blog posts. Right now I have the last day of November covered. 19 more to go. But I hope to get one or two more done tonight after dinner.

Putting Art Into Your Nature Photography

Check out the latest B&H Event Space video here.

After you view the video, check out some of the comments. It is a good thing that I am a lover of what is.

Here is the B&H blurb:

With today’s amazing photographic gear that includes camera bodies with surreal autofocus that can routinely produce superb image files in the right hands and fast, sharp lenses (including and especially the amazing super-telephotos) creating images of various birds, animals, flowers, and landscapes, is pretty much child’s play. Anyone can do it. In this program, Arthur Morris, internationally noted bird photographer and educator, will teach you to take your images to the next level. You will learn to identify good situations, to create pleasing backgrounds, to photograph action and behavior, to choose the best perspective, to read and use the light, when and how to create pleasing blurs, and to consistently create dramatic, evocative images with contest-winning potential.

This program is well-illustrated with several hundred of Artie’s spectacular images, many published around the world above his most fitting credit line: BIRDS AS ART.

Two things I forgot to take to South America …

#1: a few bandaids. No biggie.
#2: my rain jacket. A rain jacket is #1 on the do not forget list for a trip that includes 2 1/2 weeks at South Georgia and three weeks on the Falklands. After a great day of rest I will be doing the Inca Tern and Peruvian Pelican day trip tomorrow in hopes of finding a rain jacket in a local supply store.

Till whenever.