Exposure Question: How Far to the Right? And Still More 100-400 II Versatility « Arthur Morris/BIRDS AS ART

Exposure Question: How Far to the Right? And Still More 100-400 II Versatility

What’s Up?

I should be well on my way home if everything had gone according to plan. I hope to be visiting with y’all on again soon. I will be back in the office late on the afternoon of Friday, April 29.


The Streak

Today’s blog post marks 174 days in a row with a new educational blog post… 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. Please remember that if you are shopping for items that we carry in the BAA Online Store (as noted in red at the close of this post below) we would appreciate your business.

Price Reduced $2500

Japan In Winter IPT. February 9-24, 2017: $11,499 (was $13,999)/double occupancy.

Price Reduced $2,500 on 3-8-16!

Please e-mail for couple and IPT repeat customer discount information.

As I really, really want to make it back to Japan in winter one more time, I decided to lower the price of the world’s best Japan in Winter trip by $2,500. Yes my trip has three great leaders including the best bird photography instructor on the planet. That’s the guy who knows where to be when and why. And yes, it is now a bit more expensive than most. And yes, we stay at a fine hotel in Tokyo. And yes, we stay in a marvelous traditional hotel for our three nights at the Snow Monkey Park. And yes, we are perfectly located on Hokkaido, minutes from the premier Red-crowned Crane sanctuary and an easy drive to most of the other wondrous avian attractions. And yes, we enjoy home cooked breakfasts and dinners prepared by Shinobu, the wife of our local Japanese guide. She is an incredible chef. After three visits her meals are now traditional Japanese fine-tuned for the American palate. And yes, my tour is longer than the others, giving us many days with the cranes. I saw one trip with only two days of crane photography; what a bummer. End each day with a traditional onsen (hot springs mineral bath) to complete your immersion in Japanese culture.

Life is short. I hope that you can join me. Scroll down for details.


snow-monkeys-grooming-_r7a8797-nagano-japan

This image was created on the 2015 Japan in Winter IPT with the hand held 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 400. Evaluative metering +1 1/3 stops as framed: 1/400 sec. at f/6.3. AWB.

I selected a single AF point one to the right and two rows down from the center AF Point/AI Servo Spot Focus/Shutter Button AF as originally framed was active at the moment of exposure (as is always best when hand holding). This was a small crop from above, left, and below. The selected AF point was on the side of the upper breast of the male. Click on the image to see a larger version.

Snow Monkeys grooming

Still More 100-400 II Versatility

On my San Diego surgery trip, Patrick Sparkman and I began calling the 100-400 II the La Jolla lens as it proved very useful in a great variety of situations. As it is the only lens that I bring up the hill to the Monkey Park, I will need to start calling it the Snow Monkey Park lens as well. For today’s featured image–the first keeper from the 2106 trip, I backed up a step or to and zoomed out to 100mm to get the framing that I wanted. Two minutes later I was photographing the single hand of the monkey on our right. The new 1-4II is both amazing and amazingly versatile.


ettrsnowmonkeys

Photo Mechanic screen capture

Exposure Question: How Far to the Right?

As with today’s featured image, there are times when it is the right strategy to expose so far to the right that certain background elements are over-exposed with tons of blinkies. Why? To make sure to get all the detail that you can in the monkey’s fur. Do note that snow in soft light contains little if any detail so we are really not hurting anything with this strategy. Additionally, With the huge 5DS R files, I was easily able to minimize the amount of snow in the image by cropping from our right and from above.

Photo Mechanic

More and more folks are going to Photo Mechanic as their image browser. I use PM to pick my keepers and delete my rejects just about ever day of the year. You can save a few bucks on your purchase by calling Jim at the office at 863-692-0906 weekdays.


japan-2016-card

Consider joining me in Japan in February, 2017, for the world’s best Japan in Winter workshop. Click on the card to enjoy the spectacular larger version.

Japan In Winter IPT. February 9-24, 2017: $11,499 (was $13,999)/double occupancy.

Price Reduced $2,500 on 3-8-16!

All lodging including the Tokyo hotel on 9 FEB, all breakfasts & dinners, ground transport and transfers including bus to the monkey park hotel, and all entrance fees and in-country flights are included. Not included: international flights, all lunches–most are on the run, and alcoholic beverages.

Please e-mail for couple and IPT repeat customer discount information.

This trip is one day longer than the great 2014 trip to allow for more flexibility, more time with the cranes, and most importantly, more time for landscape photography. Hokkaido is gorgeous. You will enjoy tons of pre-trip planning and gear advice, in-the-field instruction and guidance, at-the-lodge Photoshop and image review sessions in addition to short introductory slide programs for each of the amazing locations. Skilled photographer Paul McKenzie handles the logistics and we enjoy the services of Japan’s best wildlife photography guide whom I affectionately call “Hokkaido Bear.” His network of local contacts and his knowledge of the weather, the area, and the birds is unparalleled and enables him to have us in the best location every day.


japan-2016-a-card

Amazing subjects. Beautiful settings. Nonstop action and unlimited opportunities. Join me.

The Logistics

Arrive Tokyo: 9 FEB 2017 the latest. 8 FEB is safer and gives you a day to get acclimated to the time change. Your hotel room for the night of the 9th is covered.

Bus Travel to Monkey Park Hotel: 10 FEB: A 1/2 DAY of monkey photography is likely depending on our travel time… This traditional hotel is first class all the way. Our stay includes three ten course Japanese dinners; these sumptuous meals will astound you and delight your taste buds. There are many traditional hot springs mineral baths (onsens) on site in this 150 year old hotel.

Full Day snow monkeys: FEB 11.

Full Day snow monkeys: FEB 12.

13 FEB: Full travel day to Hokkaido/arrive at our lodge in the late afternoon. The lodge is wonderful. All the rooms at the lodge have beds. Bring your warm pajamas. A local onsen (hot springs bath and tubs) is available for $5 each day before dinner–when you are cold, it is the best thing since sliced bread. The home-cooked Japanese styles meals at the lodge are to die for. What’s the best news? Only a small stand of woods separates us from the very best crane sanctuary. During one big snowstorm we were the only photo group to be able to get to Tsurui Ito; we had the whole place to ourselves in perfect conditions for crane photography!

FEB 14-23: Red-crowned Crane, raptors in flight, Whooper Swans, and scenic photography. Ural Owl possible. An overnight trip to Rausu for Steller’s Sea Eagle and White-tailed Eagle photography on the tourists boats is 100% dependent on the weather, road, and sea ice conditions. Only our trip offers complete flexibility in this area. It has saved us on more than once occasion. The cost of 2 eagle-boat trips is included. If the group would like to do more than two boat trips and we all agree, there will be an additional charge for the extra trip or trips. No matter the sea ice conditions, we will do two eagle boat trips (as long as we can make the drive to Rausu; it snows a lot up there). We have never been shut out.In 2016 there was no sea ice but our guide arranged for two amazingly productive boat trips.

Lodging notes: bring your long johns for sleeping in the lodge. At the Snow Monkey Park, and in Rausu, the hotel the rooms are Japanese-style. You sleep on comfortable mats on the floor. Wi-fi is available every day of the trip.

FEB 24. Fly back to Tokyo for transfer to your airport if you are flying home that night, or, to your hotel if you are overnighting. If you need to overnight, the cost of that room is on you.


japan-2016-card-b

Life is short. Hop on the merry-go-round.

To Sign Up

To save your spot, please send your $5,000 non-refundable deposit check made out to “Birds as Art” to Arthur Morris/BIRDS AS ART, PO Box 7245, Indian Lake Estates, FL 33855. I do hope that you can join me for this trip of a lifetime. Do e-mail with any questions or give me a buzz at 863-692-0906.

Purchasing travel insurance within 2 weeks of our cashing your deposit check is strongly recommended. On two fairly recent Galapagos 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.

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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 BIRDS AS ART Online Store, especially the Mongoose M3.6 tripod heads, Induro tripods and ballheads, Wimberley heads and plates, LensCoats and accessories, and the like. 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, 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 visiting the BAA Online store as well.

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, 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 visiting the BAA Online store as well.

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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 🙂

10 comments to Exposure Question: How Far to the Right? And Still More 100-400 II Versatility

  • avatar Allen Ahner

    Artie I’m curious to know your workflow. If you’re using Canon’s DPP4 and / or PM along with PS or LR where do you start and how do you move between these apps? If I open my images in DPP4, per your recommendation (a good one) then I can access PS via the menu. Beyond that I find myself having to save it in the folder to which I initially imported it and then import into LR if need be. I’ve read a number of blogs from photographers regarding this workflow using DPP4 and I’m just not satisifed!
    Regards,
    a

    • avatar Arthur Morris/BIRDS AS ART

      Hi Alan,

      My workflow is fast and simple:

      #1: I pick my keepers and delete the rejects in PhotoMechanic. Do a search to learn more and save a few bucks on your purchase by calling Jim at the office at 863-692-0906 if you bite.

      #2: I do my RAW conversions in DPP 4: fast and simple with accurate colors and with maximum fine detail preserved. All of the images in a given folder in PhotoMechanic appear in the same folder in DPP 4 so no need to “move between them.” And no Lightroom library “where are my images?” problems.

      #3: I open my converted TIFF in Photoshop by highlighting the image and hitting Shift + Control + P.

      Nothing could be simpler and I am very satisfied.

      a

      ps: If I were using a PC (perish the thought) I would be using BreezeBrowser to pick my keepers.

  • avatar Jackie Milburn

    Artie, This post has been a great help.

    As long as the subject isn’t blown out the small amount of blown out snow doesn’t really matter…. I Think the third monkey anchors the photo. Since your looking down on the subjects cropping out the third monkey would make the image look awkward; plus if you did crop out #3 you would still have it’s reflection. To me, the third monkeys look is one of anticipation.

    I may have to try BreezeBrowser..I mostly use LR and infanview

    • avatar Jackie Milburn

      :0 ! it should have been “awkward”, sorry!! blaming spell check 🙂

      I downloaded BB pro free trial…we’ll see how it goes… I go through images everyday so hopefully it will make my workflow faster & organized.

  • avatar Stu

    In my very humble opinion, the out of focus monkey in the background, who seems to be looking out of the frame to the left, is a distracting element.
    Best wishes, Artie, for an excellent return trip.
    Thanks for the blog posts.

    • avatar Arthur Morris/BIRDS AS ART

      Thanks for commenting. I like him as he seems to be staring out into space 🙂 a

  • avatar Frank Sheets

    Hi Artie,

    Trust you had a ball on your Africa trip and look forward to seeing some of the images.

    Considering today’s image, from my perspective, the blown out highlights in the background are just too much. Considering there are no details, if you tried to tone them down, they would only go grey, so that is not a solution. To me, the value of the image is the interaction of the two monkeys in the foreground. I like the slightly out of focus of the distant monkey, but honestly, he would have to go and I would crop the image down to the interaction of the two front monkeys. Just my 2 cents for what its worth.

    The lens, got to replace my old one with the newer version before Galapagos, but hopefully well before.

    Thanks for keeping the blog going while you were gone. Being on the west coast, I look forward every morning to checking out what you have to offer.

    Later,

    Frank

    • avatar Arthur Morris/BIRDS AS ART

      Thanks for commenting Frank.

      I do not mind the blown snow as snow in soft light has no detail anyway 🙂

      Good plan. Please remember to use my link. Leaving J-Burg in about 90 minutes 🙂

      It was an amazing trip with incredible subject variety.

      later and love and see you both in Guayaquil. artie

  • Hi Artie,

    If I stay with a PC, is there a reason for PhotoMechanic, or would I stay with BreezeBrowser/Downloader?

    Mike