Arthur Morris/BIRDS AS ART
April 10th, 2012

Canon EOS-5D Mark III High ISO Performance

This Common Loon molting to breeding plumage was photographed well after the sun had gone behind the hills in Morro Bay CA with the tripod-mounted Canon 800mm f/5.L IS lens and the Canon EOS-5D Mark III. ISO 3200. Evaluative metering +1 1/3 stops: 1/80 sec. at f/5.6 in Av mode.

Lower Central Sensor–Expand AF area/AI Servo Rear Focus AF active at the moment of exposure. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image for a larger version.

ISO 3200

I had a chance to create some high ISO images on the recently concluded Morro Bay IPT. I started this blog post with the ISO 3200 image above as it contains lots of black and dark tones where noise is often a serious problem for many. The very best way to minimize noise with any camera body is to expose well to the right as I did here; see the histogram lower right in the BreezeBrowser Main View page screen capture below. I exposed so far to the right that I actually had some blinkies on the breast. They can be seen below (slightly enhanced) as solid black. I made sure to click “Show Flashing Highlights” on the Breezebrowser Main View page under View. The not really “blown” highlights were easily recovered by moving the Recovery Slider to the right during the RAW conversion in ACR as described in detail in Digital Basics (along with my complete digital workflow and dozens of great Photoshop tips).

For this image I ran Noise Reduction during the ACR conversion after first enlarging the image to 100%. On the Detail tab (the third tab from left to right) I set the following under Noise Reduction by trial and error while clicking preview on and off:

Luminance: 25
Luminanace Detail: 50
Luminance Contrast: 50
Color: 25
Color Detail: 50

Please understand that I am in no way expert in this area. I simply experimented and went with what looked good at 100%.

Be sure to click on the image to see the 1280 wide version and let me know what you think of the noise levels for ISO 3200.

BTW, I went with ISO 3200 as the 1/80 sec. shutter speed is pretty much close to an absolute minimum with a slowly swimming loon…. I am often asked, “What’s the highest ISO you will use?” I always answer, “The one that gets me the shutter speed that I need.”

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As above, this screen capture of a BreezeBrowser main view page shows how far to the right I pushed the exposure in an effort to minimize noise. You can learn the basics of digital exposure and histograms in the “Exposure Simplified” section of ABP II. And you can learn why I use BreezeBrowser every day for sorting, editing (selecting the keepers), and storing my images by clicking here.

ISO 1600

The next image was created earlier in the trip than the loon image above at ISO 1600.

This Long-billed Curlew image was created with the tripod-mounted Canon 800mm f/5.L IS lens and the Canon EOS-5D Mark III. ISO 400. Evaluative metering +2 1/3 stops: 1/500 sec. at f/5.6 in Manual mode.

Left Central Sensor–Expand AF area/AI Servo Rear Focus AF active at the moment of exposure. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image for a larger version.

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This is the histogram for the image above. Note the bulk of the data all the way to the right….

Noise with overall light-toned images is generally less problematic than in images with dark tones. None-the-less many of the Morro Bay IPT folks were totally amazed by the lack of noise when they viewed the original image file at 100%. Only my default Noise Reduction setting (Color: 25) was applied during conversion. Click on the image to see a larger size and let us know what you think for the noise levels. Remember, the best way to reduce noise levels is to expose to the right.

Important Contest News/Deadline Extended

While you may upload images until 11:59pm eastern time on April 30, 2012, the very last day for registering for the contest and for making eligible B&H purchases will be Monday, April 23, 2012. This will give us time to process your registrations and verify your B&H purchases and will give you time to upload your images successfully. Good luck to all.

Do save your e-mail receipts for eligible B&H purchases made after Monday, April 23 as you will be able to use them for entry into the BIRDS AS ART 2nd International Bird Photography Competition; details will be announced in several months. Please remember, only B&H purchases made using the product-specific BAA B&H affiliate links in the Bulletins or on the blog or the more general link here qualify. See additional details by scrolling down to item 2 here. If in doubt, simply start your B&H searches by clicking here:

http://www.bhphotovideo.com/?BI=6633&KBID=7226

BAA Bulletin #405

BAA Bulletin #405 is on line and may be accessed in dramatic black and white format here. Be sure to scroll down and check out the two spectacular Judge’s Favorite images.

  • MIDWAY 2013
  • CONTEST UPDATE
  • THE BLOG IS THE BOMB
  • POSSE NEWS/ROBERT AMORUSO
  • IPT UPDATES

Earn Free Contest Entries and Support both the Bulletins and the Blog by making all your B & H purchases here.

More and more folks are earning multiple contest entries with their B & H purchases. See here for details on that. Eleven great categories, 34 winning and honored images, and prize pools valued in excess of $20,000. Click here to visit the competition home page.

Shopper’s Guide

Below is a list of the gear used to create the images in today’s post. Thanks a stack to all who have used the Shopper’s Guide links to purchase their gear as a thank you for all the free information that we bring you on the Blog and in the Bulletins. Before you purchase anything be sure to check out the advice in our Shopper’s Guide.

Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens. Right now this is my all time favorite super-telephoto lens.
Canon EOS-5D Mark III. Except when I need extreme focal length, I have been using my 5D III on the 800 a ton. And loving it.

And from the BAA On-line Store:

LensCoats. I have a LensCoat on each of my big lenses to protect them from nicks and thus increase their re-sales value. All my big lens LensCoat stuff is in Hardwood Snow pattern.
LegCoat Tripod Leg Covers. I have four tripods active and each has a Hardwood Snow LegCoat on it to help prevent further damage to my tender shoulders 🙂 And you will love them in mega-cold weather….
Gitzo GT3530LS Tripod. This one will last you a lifetime.
Mongoose M3.6 Tripod Head. Right now this is the best tripod head around for use with lenses that weigh less than 9 pounds. For heavier lenses, check out the Wimberley V2 head.
CR-80 Replacement Foot for Canon 800. When using the 800 on a Mongoose as I do, replacing the lens foot with this accessory lets the lens sit like a dog whether pointed up or down and prevents wind-blown spinning of your lens on breezy days by centering the lens directly over the tripod.
Double Bubble Level. You will find one in my camera’s hot shoe whenever I am not using flash.
The Lens Align Mark II. I use the Lens Align Mark II pretty much religiously to micro-adjust all of my gear an average of once a month and always before a major trip. Enjoy our free comprehensive tutorial here.
BreezeBrowser. I do not see how any digital photographer can exist without this program.

April 8th, 2012

Seven Miles Off Topic: Powerless?

Seven Miles Off Topic: Powerless?

A few years back I was not very happy with the nine LaCie hard drives that I had purchased. Something like seven of them failed within months, two of those twice. I called and said, “I have a big on-line presence and I can hurt you. I want a full refund.” “Sorry, no. The best we can so is repair them.”

So I ran an item or two in a Bulletin and asked folks who had had problems with LaCie drives to e-mail me. Many did. I shared all of the negative comments via the Bulletin and forwarded the Bulletins to my contact at LaCie. In short order I had my refund….

So when I received the pass-along e-mail from friend Joan Masson, I just had to share it with you here. Note: Joanie sends me about a dozen each week. Most get deleting instantly especially the political ones. But this one will strike a chord with most of us.

Getting Even With United Airlines

A musician named Dave Carroll had difficulty with United Airlines. United apparently damaged his treasured Taylor guitar ($3500) during a flight. Dave spent over 9 months trying to get United to pay for damages caused by baggage handlers to his custom Taylor guitar. During his final exchange with the United Customer Relations Manager, he stated that he was left with no choice other than to create a music video for YouTube exposing their lack of cooperation.

The manager responded: “Good luck with that one, pal.”

So he posted a retaliatory video on YouTube. The video has since received over 10 million hits. United Airlines contacted the musician and attempted
settlement in exchange for pulling the video. Naturally his response was: “Good luck with that one, pal.”

Here’s a link to the video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5YGc4zOqozo

The original video went totally viral with 11,764,355 views as of 6:10pm eastern time on Sunday, 4-8-12.

The song is cleverly written and the video is pretty darned cool. As for the song and the music, I love it. Dave Carroll comes of as a very nice young man. With brother Don, he is a member of a two man musical group, Sons of Maxwell which who performs both traditional Celtic folk music and original compositions with a pop-folk sound. While doing some on-line research I learned that the song we first posted on You Tube in July 2009; where was I? You can find lots more info and some great links on Wikipedia here.

There were two follow-up videos that you can find on the original You Tube link above. Most times that I visit You Tube I spend at least a half hour following and listening to the links.

The neatest thing of all is that Dave Carroll’s career got a huge boost from the media storm that followed the release of the video. This from his bio:

Dave Carroll is an award winning singer-songwriter, professional speaker and social media innovator based in Halifax, Nova Scotia Canada. He began his music career with his brother Don in the band Sons of Maxwell and has been enjoying success as a solo artist for the last two years. For two decades, Dave has charmed fans with his approach to music. His ability to extract the essence of a message and craft it into song is a rare gift that is attracting fans of all ages while his sense of humour and disarmingly warm stage presence makes each live experience a memorable one for audiences around the world.

Known as a master storyteller, Dave’s incredible talent was introduced to millions when his 2009 YouTube music video ‘United Breaks Guitars’ became a worldwide sensation. The song chronicled his experience in the customer service process with United Airlines. His creative use of social media to share that message has reached over 150 million people. United Breaks Guitars was named one of the five most important videos in Google’s History.

The United Breaks Guitars trilogy has awakened companies everywhere to the importance of focusing on the customer and on delivering exceptional customer experience. Dave Carroll is a musician with a message, demonstrating the power one voice can have in today’s socially driven world. Dave has become internationally famous as one of the world’s top media relations innovators & customer experience authorities. He is also widely sought after as a content creator & songwriter.

Dave is co-founder of Gripevine.com; if you have a complaint against a company or corporation you may be able to have them resolved by clicking here.

If anyone heard of this in 2009 or is otherwise familiar with Dave or the group, please leave a comment and let us know.

April 7th, 2012

Unexpected...

Image #1 was created with the tripod-mounted Canon EF 180mm f/3.5L macro lens and the Canon EOS-5D Mark III. ISO 400. Evaluative metering at zero: 1/500 sec. at f/6.3 in Av mode.

Central sensor Rear Focus/AI Servo AF and recompose. Click on the image to see a larger version.

Home Safe

I flew home from California yesterday getting home at about 7pm. Morro Bay was great. And so was the IPT.

Unexpected…

There were some nice patches of California Poppies in and around Morro Bay. We saw them every day on the way to and from the birds. And we had some great birds. On the last morning of the IPT I got back to the room at about 9:45am. We were meeting for lunch at Giovanni’s at 11. I was tired and was looking forward to my nap. But those poppies–all in perfect bloom–had looked so, so beautiful that I grabbed the macro lens, the diffuser, and the reflector, and went out to spend an hour photographing flowers. You gotta love it.

For image #1 I used my big reflector/diffuser to block the wind and diffused the direct sunlight with a slightly smaller one. By scrolling down here you can find a variety of collapsible models. I’ve been saying for years that most flower images could be drastically improved by shading or diffusing direct sunlight. And bouncing some light back in with a reflector can make the images even stronger.

Image #2 was also created with the tripod-mounted Canon EF 180mm f/3.5L macro lens and the Canon EOS-5D Mark III. ISO 400. Evaluative metering +2/3 stop: 1/200 sec. at f/5.6 in Av mode.

Central sensor Rear Focus/AI Servo AF and recompose. Click on the image to see a larger version.

For the image above I raised the tripod so as to include a bit of background and then went with a pano crop. I shaded the blossom with my body and bounced a bit of light back in with the gold side of the reflector.

Image #3 was created with the hand held Canon EF 180mm f/3.5L macro lens and the Canon EOS-5D Mark III. ISO 400. Evaluative metering +2/3 stop: 1/1000 sec. at f/3.5 in Av mode.

Click on the image to see a larger version.

Inspired by stuff that I learned from Denise Ippolito’s “The Softer Side of Macro” I got down on the ground and took a look at the backlit flowers. For this one I got pretty close to the minumum focusing distance of the lens. As autofocus with this lens is very poor at best in low contrast situations I pre-focused manually on the pink edge of the sepal and tried to make an image or two each time that my breathing and body movement brought that edge into sharp focus. It learned that technique from a George Lepp seminar that I attended years ago. For all of these images it was important to check the RGB histogram to avoid burning one of the color channels. I love that Canon finally got around to putting a thin white line around the histogram box on the 5D Mark III so that outdoor photographers can actually see the ends of the histogram while in the field….

Image #4 was also created with the hand held Canon EF 180mm f/3.5L macro lens and the Canon EOS-5D Mark III. ISO 400. Evaluative metering +2/3 stop: 1/2500 sec. at f/4 in Av mode.

Click on the image to see a larger version.

Again inspired by “The Softer Side of Macro” I employed stronger backlight for this image of the whole flower. Focusing was achieved as in image #3.

Which Do You Like Best?

Take a moment to leave a comment and let us know which image you like best. And least. And why. I have a clear #1 and a clear #2.

Contest Deadline Extended

The contest deadline has been extended until April 30, 2012. In case you missed the big news, click here.

Earn Free Contest Entries and Support both the Bulletins and the Blog by making all your B & H purchases here.

More and more folks are earning multiple contest entries with their B & H purchases. See here for details on that. Eleven great categories, 34 winning and honored images, and prize pools valued in excess of $20,000. Click here to visit the competition home page.

Shopper’s Guide

Below is a list of the gear used to create the images in today’s post. Thanks a stack to all who have used the Shopper’s Guide links to purchase their gear as a thank you for all the free information that we bring you on the Blog and in the Bulletins. Before you purchase anything be sure to check out the advice in our Shopper’s Guide.

Canon EF 180mm f/3.5L macro lens. I love the narrow angle of view and longer working distances that come with Canon’s telephoto macro lens.
Canon EOS-5D Mark III. Except when I need extreme focal length, I have been using my 5D III on the 800 a ton. And loving it.

And from the BAA On-line Store:

LensCoats. I have a LensCoat on each of my big lenses to protect them from nicks and thus increase their re-sales value. All my big lens LensCoat stuff is in Hardwood Snow pattern.
LegCoat Tripod Leg Covers. I have four tripods active and each has a Hardwood Snow LegCoat on it to help prevent further damage to my tender shoulders 🙂 And you will love them in mega-cold weather….
Gitzo GT3530LS Tripod. This one will last you a lifetime.
Mongoose M3.6 Tripod Head. Right now this is the best tripod head around for use with lenses that weigh less than 9 pounds. For heavier lenses, check out the Wimberley V2 head.
Double Bubble Level. You will find one in my camera’s hot shoe whenever I am not using flash.
The Lens Align Mark II. I use the Lens Align Mark II pretty much religiously to micro-adjust all of my gear an average of once a month and always before a major trip. Enjoy our free comprehensive tutorial here.
BreezeBrowser. I do not see how any digital photographer can exist without this program.

April 5th, 2012

Keep or Delete?

This image of a huge breaking wave was created at 7:23 am on April 1, 2012 just north of Morro Rock with the with the tripod-mounted Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens and the Canon EOS-1D Mark IV. ISO 400. Evaluative metering +1 2/3 stops: 1/800 sec. at f/5.6 in Manual mode.

Central Sensor/AI Servo Rear Focus active at the moment of exposure. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to enjoy a larger version.

Keep or Delete?

Would you keep or delete the image above? Before you answer, there are several important concepts to understand:

1-With images of over-all light-toned scenes made when the sun is at less than full strength you generally need to add at least two stops of light to get some data half way into the right most box of the histogram.

2-When you expose such images properly they will (properly) look washed out on the back of your camera and then again on your computer monitor.

3-Such properly exposed digital images have huge potential.

4-The reason that you need to expose to the right in these low light/overall light-toned situations is to produce files with the greatest amount of information. If you do not believe me, simply photograph the pre-dawn sky at -1 stop and then again at +3 stops. Now download the images and compare the file size…. Let me know what you learn.

The optimized image that I created from the image above appears below and was first published in this recent blog post: “Frozen and Battered.” If you missed that one click here.

This is the optimized image created from the image capture above.

Magic?

Nope. There was no magic involved. The image was converted in ACR as described in detail in Digital Basics. Note: if you set the Black point by moving the Black slider to the right while holding down the Alt key (the Command key for Mac) and your image looks too dark or too contrasty simply move it back to the left to taste.

After converting the RAW file to a TIFF and bringing it into Photoshop I brought the image into NIK Color Efex Pro. I ran Tonal Contrast at 80% and Detail Extractor at 50%. I guess that that might qualify as magic as it really juiced up the image. I used a large soft brush to erase the NIK effects from the sky; you almost never want to run Detail Extractor on the sky and the same is usually true of Tonal Contrast….

BTW, though I saw the top image while looking at the back of the camera I saw the optimized image in my mind’s eye. Heck I visualized it as I looked through the viewfinder. And even though the image on the back of the camera looked totally washed out I loved it from the moment I saw it :).

ps: I kept it!

NIK

As regular readers know NIK’s Color Efex Pro 4 is now an integral part of my workflow. You can save 15% on all NIK products by clicking here and entering BAA in the Promo Code box at check-out. Then hit Apply to see your savings. You can download a trial copy that will work for 15 days and allow you to create full sized images.

Contest Deadline Extended

The contest deadline has been extended until April 30, 2012. In case you missed the big news, click here.

Earn Free Contest Entries and Support both the Bulletins and the Blog by making all your B & H purchases here.

More and more folks are earning multiple contest entries with their B & H purchases. See here for details on that. Eleven great categories, 34 winning and honored images, and prize pools valued in excess of $20,000. Click here to visit the competition home page.

Shopper’s Guide

Below is a list of the gear used to create the images in today’s post. Thanks a stack to all who have used the Shopper’s Guide links to purchase their gear as a thank you for all the free information that we bring you on the Blog and in the Bulletins. Before you purchase anything be sure to check out the advice in our Shopper’s Guide.

Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens. Right now this is my all time favorite super-telephoto lens.
Canon EOS-1D Mark IV professional digital camera body. The very best professional digital camera body that I have ever used.

And from the BAA On-line Store:

LensCoats. I have a LensCoat on each of my big lenses to protect them from nicks and thus increase their re-sales value. All my big lens LensCoat stuff is in Hardwood Snow pattern.
LegCoat Tripod Leg Covers. I have four tripods active and each has a Hardwood Snow LegCoat on it to help prevent further damage to my tender shoulders 🙂 And you will love them in mega-cold weather….
Gitzo GT3530LS Tripod. This one will last you a lifetime.
Mongoose M3.6 Tripod Head. Right now this is the best tripod head around for use with lenses that weigh less than 9 pounds. For heavier lenses, check out the Wimberley V2 head.
CR-80 Replacement Foot for Canon 800. When using the 800 on a Mongoose as I do, replacing the lens foot with this accessory lets the lens sit like a dog whether pointed up or down and prevents wind-blown spinning of your lens on breezy days by centering the lens directly over the tripod.
Double Bubble Level. You will find one in my camera’s hot shoe whenever I am not using flash.
The Lens Align Mark II. I use the Lens Align Mark II pretty much religiously to micro-adjust all of my gear an average of once a month and always before a major trip. Enjoy our free comprehensive tutorial here.
BreezeBrowser. I do not see how any digital photographer can exist without this program.

April 4th, 2012

Target Acquired; Results as Expected

This Long-billed Curlew image was created with the tripod-mounted Canon 800mm f/5.L IS lens and the Canon EOS-5D Mark III. ISO 400. Evaluative metering +2/3 stop: 1/2000 sec. at f/5.6 in Manual mode.

Central Sensor–right side Expand AF area/AI Servo Rear Focus active at the moment of exposure. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image for a larger version.

The bird was moved down and back in the frame using the Layer Masking techniques that I learned from Robert O’Toole’s APTATS II.

Target Acquired; Results as Expected

When I decided to return to Morro Bay, I had one bird in mind: North America’s largest shorebird, Long-billed Curlew. They are plentiful here in late fall, winter, and early spring. And they are relatively tame. Even on the coldest, windiest day in memory, we got some nice images of our target species. And we have continued to do so on the rather pleasant mornings and the unseasonably cold, windy afternoons. What can I say? I love shorebirds, especially the large showy ones.

This image was created with the tripod-mounted Canon 800mm f/5.L IS lens and the Canon EOS-5D Mark III. ISO 400. Evaluative metering +2/3 stop: 1/1250 sec. at f/5.6 in Manual mode.

Central Sensor–far right side Expand AF area/AI Servo Rear Focus active at the moment of exposure. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image for a larger version.

The instructor (hey, that’s me!), said, and I quote: “Watch for a breaking wave in the background. The worst place for them is behind the bird’s head; they are best positioned on the same level as or just below the bird’s feet.” The sand crab in the bird’s beak and the splashes around the bird’s legs here are big pluses.

This image was created with from ground level with me behind the tripod with the legs splayed. Canon 800mm f/5.L IS lens and the Canon EOS-5D Mark III. ISO 400. Evaluative metering +2/3 stop: 1/2000 sec. at f/5.6 in Manual mode.

Central Sensor–far right side Expand AF area/AI Servo Rear Focus active at the moment of exposure. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image for a larger version. As you can see, I am loving my 5D Mark III.

Contest Deadline Extended

The contest deadline has been extended until April 30, 2012. In case you missed the big news, click here.

Earn Free Contest Entries and Support both the Bulletins and the Blog by making all your B & H purchases here.

More and more folks are earning multiple contest entries with their B & H purchases. See here for details on that. Eleven great categories, 34 winning and honored images, and prize pools valued in excess of $20,000. Click here to visit the competition home page.

Shopper’s Guide

Below is a list of the gear used to create the images in today’s post. Thanks a stack to all who have used the Shopper’s Guide links to purchase their gear as a thank you for all the free information that we bring you on the Blog and in the Bulletins. Before you purchase anything be sure to check out the advice in our Shopper’s Guide.

Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens. Right now this is my all time favorite super-telephoto lens.

Canon EOS-5D Mark III. Except when I need extreme focal length, I have been using my 5D III on the 800 a ton. And loving it.

And from the BAA On-line Store:

BLUBB. The BLUBB (Big Lens Ultimate BeanBag) is the world’s finest big lens beanbag. There are knock-offs for half the price but you will be wasting your money….
LensCoats. I have a LensCoat on each of my big lenses to protect them from nicks and thus increase their re-sales value. All my big lens LensCoat stuff is in Hardwood Snow pattern.
LegCoat Tripod Leg Covers. I have four tripods active and each has a Hardwood Snow LegCoat on it to help prevent further damage to my tender shoulders 🙂 And you will love them in mega-cold weather….
Gitzo GT3530LS Tripod. This one will last you a lifetime.
Mongoose M3.6 Tripod Head. Right now this is the best tripod head around for use with lenses that weigh less than 9 pounds. For heavier lenses, check out the Wimberley V2 head.
CR-80 Replacement Foot for Canon 800. When using the 800 on a Mongoose as I do, replacing the lens foot with this accessory lets the lens sit like a dog whether pointed up or down and prevents wind-blown spinning of your lens on breezy days by centering the lens directly over the tripod.
Double Bubble Level. You will find one in my camera’s hot shoe whenever I am not using flash.
The Lens Align Mark II. I use the Lens Align Mark II pretty much religiously to micro-adjust all of my gear an average of once a month and always before a major trip. Enjoy our free comprehensive tutorial here.
BreezeBrowser. I do not see how any digital photographer can exist without this program.

April 2nd, 2012

Frozen and Battered

This image was created with the tripod-mounted Canon 70-200mm f/2.8L IS II lens, the 1.4X III TC (at 280mm), and the Canon EOS-5D Mark III. ISO 100. Evaluative metering at +2 stops: 1/4 sec. at f/4 in Tv mode.

Central Sensor–Expand AF area/AI Servo Rear Focus active at the moment of exposure. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to enjoy a larger, more spectacular version.

Where do I wish I had pointed the lens. And why???

Frozen and Battered

On Sunday morning past I led a Master Class In-the-Field Workshop for the Morro Bay Photo Expo for 15 eager but very cold folks. When I arrived in Morro Bay on Friday afternoon I was shocked at how cold and damp it was. On the morning of the workshop it was clear and cold, 48 degrees to be exact. Though the surf was huge as predicted, things were not too bad. The winds were about 15mph from the west northwest when I created the image above at 6:57am.

This image of a huge breaking wave was created at 7:23 am with the with the tripod-mounted Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens and the Canon EOS-1D Mark IV. ISO 400. Evaluative metering +1 2/3 stops: 1/800 sec. at f/5.6 in Manual mode.

Central Sensor/AI Servo Rear Focus active at the moment of exposure. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to enjoy a larger version.

With the increasingly strong winds behind them, the waves got bigger just after the sun cleared the hills to the east. Folks estimated the largest waves like this one to be in excess of twenty feet tall.

This image was created at 9:03 am with the with the tripod-mounted Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens and the Canon EOS-1D Mark IV. ISO 400. Evaluative metering +2/3 stop: 1/1600 sec. at f/5.6 in Manual mode.

I used a left sensor/AI Servo Rear Focus that was active at the moment of exposure. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to enjoy a larger version.

Just after I created the image above the winds really picked up with gusts to 30mph. The birds pretty much disappeared.

This image was created with a borrowed Canon 70-200mm f/2.8L IS II lens (hand held at 150mm) and a borrowed EOS-5D Mark II. ISO 100. Evaluative metering +1/3 stop: 1/125 sec. at f/20 in Av mode.

All AF points active/shutter button AI Servo AF. Click on the image to enjoy a larger, more spectacular version. NIK Color Efex Pro Tonal Contrast plus NIK Silver Efex Pro High Structure pre-set.

With no birds around it was time to switch to soup from a stone mode and teach the boys and girls a bit about creative vision when times are tough :). At 10:30 we called it a wrap. The winds continued to increase….

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This image was created at 4:22 pm with the Canon 800mm f/5.L IS lens, the 1.4X III TC, and the Canon EOS-1D Mark IV. ISO 400. Evaluative metering at +1/3 stop: 1/400 sec. at f/10 in Manual mode.

Central sensor (by necessity) AI Servo/Rear Focus AF on the kelp which was on the same plane as the otter’s eye active at the moment of exposure. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial.

Having stayed in touch via e-mail with the incoming IPT group I met up with most of them at 3pm. Aidan and I thought that with the strong west winds that the otters might be in close to the road on the inlet side of Morro Rock. And we would be in the lee of the now very strong west wind. Good plan…. But the wind was whipping around the Rock and buffeting us from behind. Everyone was cold. Even when we got low down in the rocks the dirt swirled around and sand-blasted our eyes. It was almost impossible to photograph. Heck, at was almost impossible to stand. Twice I came close to be knocked over when I changed position. And the stronger the wind got the colder I became. When I had visited Morro Bay in 2009 in January it was warm and sunny and with the IPT in spring, I came woefully unprepared clothing-wise…. The sand scoured our hands and all unprotected areas of skin. We estimated gusts of 50 mph or more.

As cute as the otters were we gave up on them just before 5pm and headed for the beach. Even though we were on an open, exposed beach the force of the winds was a bit less as there was no Morro Rock created vortex. Or so it seemed.

With our backs to the wind we had a great afternoon with a pond full of bathing and roosting gulls and a single Long-billed Curlew. We finally quit at 7pm and headed for the motel and the IPT’s introductory slide program at 8pm. Every local whom we talked too the next day stated emphatically that they had never experience the wind and waves of the previous day, even those who had been in the area for forty years. You gotta love it. Monday was sunny and relatively mild.

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This image was created at 6:17 pm with the Canon 800mm f/5.L IS lens and the Canon EOS-5D Mark III. ISO 400. Evaluative metering at zero: 1/2500 sec. at f/5.6 in Manual mode.

Central Sensor–Expand AF area/AI Servo Rear Focus active at the moment of exposure. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial.

Click on the image for a larger version.

It was a treat to photograph breeding plumage California Gull in the sweet light. At one point a rogue wave driven by the high winds sent all of us running in an effort to keep our boots dry…. It was a fitting end to a very challenging day.

Note: the more I learn about and use my 5D III the more I am loving it.

Earn Free Contest Entries and Support both the Bulletins and the Blog by making all your B & H purchases here.

More and more folks are earning multiple contest entries with their B & H purchases. See here for details on that. Eleven great categories, 34 winning and honored images, and prize pools valued in excess of $20,000. Click here to visit the competition home page.

Shopper’s Guide

Below is a list of the gear used to create the images in today’s post. Thanks a stack to all who have used the Shopper’s Guide links to purchase their gear as a thank you for all the free information that we bring you on the Blog and in the Bulletins. Before you purchase anything be sure to check out the advice in our Shopper’s Guide.

Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens. Right now this is my all time favorite super-telephoto lens.
Canon 70-200mm f/2.8L IS II lens. Man, I am loving this lens on my shoulder with the 2XIII teleconverter. I also use it a lot–depending on the situation–with the 1.4X III TC.
Canon EF 1.4X III TC. This new TC is designed to work best with the new Series II super-telephoto lenses.
Canon EOS-5D Mark III. Man, I am in love with this camera body. Both the files and the AF system are superb. I cannot wait to get to Morro Bay.
Canon EOS-1D Mark IV professional digital camera body. The very best professional digital camera body that I have ever used.

And from the BAA On-line Store:

BLUBB. The BLUBB (Big Lens Ultimate BeanBag) is the world’s finest big lens beanbag. There are knock-offs for half the price but you will be wasting your money….
LensCoats. I have a LensCoat on each of my big lenses to protect them from nicks and thus increase their re-sales value. All my big lens LensCoat stuff is in Hardwood Snow pattern.
LegCoat Tripod Leg Covers. I have four tripods active and each has a Hardwood Snow LegCoat on it to help prevent further damage to my tender shoulders 🙂 And you will love them in mega-cold weather….
Gitzo GT3530LS Tripod. This one will last you a lifetime.
Mongoose M3.6 Tripod Head. Right now this is the best tripod head around for use with lenses that weigh less than 9 pounds. For heavier lenses, check out the Wimberley V2 head.
CR-80 Replacement Foot for Canon 800. When using the 800 on a Mongoose as I do, replacing the lens foot with this accessory lets the lens sit like a dog whether pointed up or down and prevents wind-blown spinning of your lens on breezy days by centering the lens directly over the tripod.
Double Bubble Level. You will find one in my camera’s hot shoe whenever I am not using flash.
The Lens Align Mark II. I use the Lens Align Mark II pretty much religiously to micro-adjust all of my gear an average of once a month and always before a major trip. Enjoy our free comprehensive tutorial here.
BreezeBrowser. I do not see how any digital photographer can exist without this program.

April 1st, 2012

Oldies But Goodies #1

Image #1 was created with the tripod-mounted Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens and the Canon EOS-1D MIII (since replaced by the Canon EOS-1D Mark IV). ISO 400. Evaluative metering at +1 stop: 1/6 sec. at f/5.6 in Av Mode.

One Shot shutter button AF, turn off AF, and recompose. The old days for sure. Click on the image to enjoy a larger, more spectacular version.

Morro Bay Photo Expo

My two program yesterday at the Morro Bay Photo Expo were exceedingly well received. There were 208 folks at the morning seminar which included Choosing and Using Lenses for Nature Photography, Composition and Image Design, and Getting Close. About 60 folks attended the Photoshop for Nature Photographers program that afternoon. My stand-up schtick was very sharp in the morning and the folks responded quite well to pretty much every joke with several attendees actually rolling in the aisles laughing. “Liar!” The afternoon session was much more informal and folks were so into learning that I did not even consider taking the scheduled break.

If you are involved with a photography group or club that has an annual event that could attract 150 or so folks and would love a great keynote presenter please shoot me an and we can see if Canon would be willing to sponsor my appearance as they did so generously both for the F3C event in Naples last weekend and for this weekend’s gig as well. Aside from the humor folks will learn a ton :).

Oldies But Goodies #1

Here are two from January 25, 2009. Image #1 above was created at 6:46 am, image #2 below at 6:41 am, and image #3 at the bottom at 6:47 am. You can learn a ton by studying the exposure data for each image. Questions are welcome.

Image #2 was created with the tripod-mounted Canon 70-200mm f/2.8L IS II lens (at 120mm) and the Canon EOS-1D MIII (since replaced by the Canon EOS-1D Mark IV). ISO 200. Evaluative metering +1/3 stop: 1.3 seconds at f/6.3 in Av mode.

One Shot shutter button AF, turn off AF, and recompose. The old days for sure. Click on the image to enjoy a larger, more spectacular version.

Please take a moment and let us know which of the three images you like best, and why.

Image #1 was created with the tripod-mounted Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens and the Canon EOS-1D MIII (since replaced by the Canon EOS-1D Mark IV). ISO 1600. Evaluative metering at +1 stop: 1/30 sec. at f/5.6 in Av Mode.

One Shot shutter button AF, turn off AF, and recompose. The old days for sure. Click on the image to enjoy a larger, more spectacular version.

Earn Free Contest Entries and Support both the Bulletins and the Blog by making all your B & H purchases here.

More and more folks are earning multiple contest entries with their B & H purchases. See here for details on that. Eleven great categories, 34 winning and honored images, and prize pools valued in excess of $20,000. Click here to visit the competition home page.

Shopper’s Guide

Below is a list of gear that I used to create the image in this blog post. Thanks a stack to all who have used the Shopper’s Guide links to purchase their gear as a thank you for all the free information that we bring you on the Blog and in the Bulletins. Before you purchase anything be sure to check out the advice in our Shopper’s Guide.

Canon 800mm f/5.L IS lens. Right now this is my all time favorite super-telephoto lens.
Canon 70-200mm f/2.8L IS II lens. Man, I am loving this lens on my shoulder with the Canon EF 1.4X III TC. This new TC is designed to work best with the new Series II super-telephoto lenses.
Canon EOS-1D Mark IV professional digital camera body. My two Mark IVs are my workhorse digital camera bodies.

And from the BAA On-line Store:

LensCoats. I have a LensCoat on each of my big lenses to protect them from nicks and thus increase their re-sales value. All my big lens LensCoat stuff is in Hardwood Snow pattern.
LegCoat Tripod Leg Covers. I have four tripods active and each has a Hardwood Snow LegCoat on it to help prevent further damage to my tender shoulders 🙂 And you will love them in mega-cold weather….
Gitzo GT3530LS Tripod. This one will last you a lifetime.
Mongoose M3.6 Tripod Head. Right now this is the best tripod head around for use with lenses that weigh less than 9 pounds. For heavier lenses, check out the Wimberley V2 head.
CR-80 Replacement Foot for Canon 800. When using the 800 on a Mongoose as I do, replacing the lens foot with this accessory lets the lens sit like a dog whether pointed up or down and prevents wind-blown spinning of your lens on breezy days by centering the lens directly over the tripod.
Double Bubble Level. You will find one in my camera’s hot shoe whenever I am not using flash.
The Lens Align Mark II. I use the Lens Align Mark II pretty much religiously to micro-adjust all of my gear an average of once a month and always before a major trip. Enjoy our free comprehensive tutorial here.
Canon EOS-1D Mark IV User’s Guide. Learn to use your Mark IV the way that I use mine. Also available for the 7D and the Mark III here.
BreezeBrowser. I do not see how any digital photographer can exist without this program.

March 30th, 2012

Contest Deadline Extended until April 30, 2012

Contest Deadline Extended until April 30, 2012

After careful consideration, and in view of the fact that so many of you have been struggling to meet the current deadline and get your images uploaded, and in view of the fact that Jim needed to leave early on March 30 for a doctor’s appointment, and in view of the fact that the word has been spreading like wildfire, and in view of the fact that some of you have not been able to redeem your free entries for your major B&H purchases as they have not yet showed up on the transactions report, we have decided to extend the deadline for entries until April 30, 2012. There will not be any additional extensions. We thank you for your understanding and for refraining from e-mailing your complaints or posting them here as comments :).

For those of you who have been in the dark you can learn more about the BIRDS AS ART 1st International Bird Photography Competition here or by visiting the main contest page here.

later and love, artie

March 30th, 2012

LAX Travel Adventures & Last Second Morro Bay IPT Miracles

LAX Travel Adventures

When I checked in on-line on Thursday afternoon for my Friday flights to the west coast, I made sure to check the box for flight delay notification and entered my samandmayasgrandpa e-mail address. For most early morning flights I stay at the Orlando Courtyard Marriott the night before. You can leave your vehicle there for up to two weeks with no charge. So that is what I did yesterday. I got on line early this morning and voila, nothing from American Airlines. All good.

I finished re-packing and got on the 7am shuttle. With three checked bags I tipped the driver a five dollar bill. I was scheduled to fly first class to LA at 9am on American, continue on to Santa Barbara on a puddle jumper, also on AA, and then rent a car–I use and love National after having switched a year ago from Avis, and then drive to Los Osos. I would arrive just in time for the opening reception of the Morro Bay Photo Expo where I will be presenting all day Saturday and leading a Master Class/In-the-Field workshop on Sunday morning, all that thanks to the generosity of Canon USA/Explorers of Light. At curbside check-in at MCO (Orlando airport) I learned that the LA flight was delayed 2 1/2 hours. That would result in my missing my flight to Santa Barbara and missing the reception…. On to Plan B.

The porter brought my stuff inside–another five dollar tip thank you very much, and I explored several possibilities with the agent who was very helpful. The solution was for me to fly to LA on Delta’s 8:30am flight. Best news: they had a first class seat for me. That would get me into LA in more than enough time to make my flight to Santa Barbara, grab the car, and drive down to Los Osos for the reception. Now I needed to get my three checked bags over to Delta to check in. The agent grabbed a porter who was also very nice. And also very helpful as you will see in a minute. As check-in time on Delta was getting close–there is a 45 minute cutoff, the porter suggested that I rush ahead of him and said that he would catch up with all my bags, both checked and carry-ons. Not to worry, he did and I checked in on time.

The porter was nice enough to stay with me till the process was complete. I did not notice that Delta had checked my bags only to LAX. Had he not noticed, I would likely have continued on to Santa Barbara while my bags were going round and round on a carousel in LA. Ten bucks for him. I even had time to stop in the book store and grab yet another John Sandford airport novel in his Prey series. I’ve already started “Broken Prey.” The guy can wrtie! I am sitting up front on the Delta flight and for the first time ever, am online in the air. For only $12.95. Man, you gotta love being addicted…. This is the first time that I have ever posted anything from 35,000 feet!

Why the big tips? I have a theory and it has worked perfectly to date. Whenever I fly I tip the baggage folks and drivers generously to ensure good luck and safe flying. As I said, my system has a perfect record of getting me safely to my location. And if my flight crashes, what good would the extra five or ten bucks do me? I will let you know if it worked this time :).

For greater appreciation of the compostie image, click on the photo; then click on the larger version to close it.

Last Second Morro Bay IPT Miracles

When I was sending BAA Bulletin #404 yesterday I updated the IPT page as I always do. I almost deleted the Morro Bay IPT from the top of the list–there were 9 of the 10 slots filled–but thought what the heck, so I left it. Along with my cell phone number. Last night in the motel I got a call from a Martin Lord. He will be joining the group in Morro Bay on Sunday night for the introductory slide program.

But wait, it gets even better. When I got on line this morning there was an e-mail from old friend and client Jean-Luc Valliant. He will also be joining the IPT. As it says on the web site, BAA always reserves the right to exceed the posted limit by one.

BAA Bulletin #404

BAA Bulletin #404 is on-line and can best be viewed here.

  • MY THOUGHTS ON THE Canon EOS-5D Mark III
  • THE CONTEST IS BOILING HOT!
  • GEAR FOR SALE/PRICE REDUCED
  • A VERY NICE e-MAIL
  • B&H LINKS OF NOTE
  • B&H CANON SPECIALS
  • IPT UPDATES

Earn Free Contest Entries and Support both the Bulletins and the Blog by making all your B & H purchases here.

More and more folks are earning multiple contest entries with their B & H purchases. See here for details on that. Eleven great categories, 34 winning and honored images, and prize pools valued in excess of $20,000. Click here to visit the competition home page.

Shopper’s Guide

Thanks a stack to all who have used the Shopper’s Guide links to purchase their gear as a thank you for all the free information that we bring you on the Blog and in the Bulletins. Before you purchase anything be sure to check out the advice in our Shopper’s Guide.

March 28th, 2012

The Canon EOS-5D Mark III: I'm In Love!

This image was created with the tripod-mounted Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens and the Canon EOS-5D Mark III. ISO 400. Evaluative metering at +1 stop off the blue sky: 1/2000 sec. at f/5.6 in Manual mode.

Central Sensor–Expand AF area/Rear Focus AF active at the moment of exposure. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial.

Click on the image to enjoy a larger, more spectacular version.

The Canon EOS-5D Mark III: I’m In Love!

I left my office home a bit late at 8:15am today to head down to the lake five minutes from my home. With all my lenses and my new Canon EOS-5D Mark III. I photographed a few Sandhill Cranes and was especially impressed with the rear LCD screen; the images looked better than many laptop monitors I have seen. Exposure seemed very similar to my Mark IV bodies. Then I noticed an Osprey flying around with a fish so I grabbed the lens, jumped out of the car, and began making images. I kept that up for a few minutes until my arm gave out and then ran back to the car to grab the 3530 LS tripod with the Mongoose M3.6 on it. Miraculously the bird was still flying around. I created the image above just as he landed on the wire below his nest.

When I got home and viewed the series of flight images I realized that my 5D III AF predictions were true. Every image was sharp. Even when the bird flew behind a wire or the telephone pole. The files are luscious, incredibly detailed and sharp with natural color. Using this full frame camera with the 800 lens wide open at f/5.6 I needed to eliminate the vignetting. I did that for the image above in Photoshop. On the flight image below I used the Lens Correction tab in ACR.

BTW, thanks to Arash Harzeghi who pointed me here download for the Adobe Photoshop Camera Raw 6.7 Plug-In Release Candidate. I downloaded the Windows version, opened the ZIP file, and clicked on the install folder. In minutes I was able to convert my RAW files after hitting Control D in BreezeBrowser.

I must tell you, I have never been so excited about a new camera before.

I had headed out even without taking a look at the camera body manual. I had gone through all the Menus and I must say I was mega-confused…. As you can see that did not hurt my images though. As it turns out I was in Central Sensor Expand AF area. I plan on experimenting with all of the AF area selection modes. And I will of course be working hard on the BAA 5D Mark III User’s Guide. I have even figured out how to toggle between the various AF area selection modes. I could not do that this morning :). And it took me quite a while to figure out how to set up rear focus….

One strange thing that I noted while hand holding the 800. While tracking the Osprey in flight I experienced what I can only describe as IS shimmer; the viewfinder image seemed to shimmer slightly as I panned. I was of course was in AI Servo AF with IS Mode 2 set and IS on of course. The good news is that all of the images were sharp.

This image was created with the Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens and the Canon EOS-5D Mark III. ISO 400. Evaluative metering +1/3 stop: 1/640 sec. at f/8 in Manual mode. The lens was supported by a BLUBB on the car window.

Central Sensor–Expand AF area/Rear Focus AF on the right-hand bird’s eye and recompose. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to enjoy a larger version.

The image above was my first 5D Mark III keeper.

This image was also created with the Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens and the Canon EOS-5D Mark III. ISO 400. Evaluative metering +1/3 stop: 1/320 sec. at f/13 in Manual mode. As above, the lens was supported by a BLUBB on the car window.

Central Sensor–Expand AF area/Rear Focus AF on the right-hand bird’s eye and recompose. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to enjoy a larger version.

As I was working at point blank range note that I stopped down to ensure that all of the feathers on the side of the bird were rendered as sharp as possible. Depth-of-field is at a minimum when you are working near the minimum focusing distance of the lens.

This image was created with the hand held Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens and the Canon EOS-5D Mark III. ISO 400. Evaluative metering at +1 stop off the blue sky: 1/2000 sec. at f/5.6 in Manual mode.

Central Sensor–Expand AF area/Rear Focus AF active at the moment of exposure. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to enjoy a larger version.

I am not very skilled at hand holding big lenses but I was able to keep the bird in the frame for most of the flight images that I created.

B&H Links of Note

You can pre-order your Canon EOS-5D Mark III here. A second shipment is expected soon.

Even better, you can have a 5D Mark III shipped today if you package it with my favorite B-roll lens, the 24-105mm IS L zoom lens. I try never to leave home without it. The package represents a savings of $350. Here is the link for the 5D MIII/24-105mm kit.

Click here to learn more about the 24-105 and see the price of the lens alone….

The Contest Deadline…

The contest deadline–March 31, 2012 is fast approaching. Things are at a fever pitch here as as many as 30 folks have been signing up every day. Though several folks have purchased two or three entries the record is ten! We hope that your images make it in time for the judging.

BTW, if you pay without registering you will not here from us. Best to register first and then pay or send your B&H receipt. If you are late to the party click here for complete info on the BIRDS AS ART 1st International Bird Photography Competition.

Earn Free Contest Entries and Support both the Bulletins and the Blog by making all your B & H purchases here.

More and more folks are earning multiple contest entries with their B & H purchases. See here for details on that. Eleven great categories, 34 winning and honored images, and prize pools valued in excess of $20,000. Click here to visit the competition home page.

Shopper’s Guide

Below is a list of the gear used to create the images in today’s post. Thanks a stack to all who have used the Shopper’s Guide links to purchase their gear as a thank you for all the free information that we bring you on the Blog and in the Bulletins. Before you purchase anything be sure to check out the advice in our Shopper’s Guide.

Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens. Right now this is my all time favorite super-telephoto lens.
Canon EOS-5D Mark III. Man, I am in love with this camera body. Both the files and the AF system are superb. I cannot wait to get to Morro Bay.

And from the BAA On-line Store:

BLUBB. The BLUBB (Big Lens Ultimate BeanBag) is the world’s finest big lens beanbag. There are knock-offs for half the price but you will be wasting your money….
LensCoats. I have a LensCoat on each of my big lenses to protect them from nicks and thus increase their re-sales value. All my big lens LensCoat stuff is in Hardwood Snow pattern.
LegCoat Tripod Leg Covers. I have four tripods active and each has a Hardwood Snow LegCoat on it to help prevent further damage to my tender shoulders 🙂 And you will love them in mega-cold weather….
Gitzo GT3530LS Tripod. This one will last you a lifetime.
Mongoose M3.6 Tripod Head. Right now this is the best tripod head around for use with lenses that weigh less than 9 pounds. For heavier lenses, check out the Wimberley V2 head.
CR-80 Replacement Foot for Canon 800. When using the 800 on a Mongoose as I do, replacing the lens foot with this accessory lets the lens sit like a dog whether pointed up or down and prevents wind-blown spinning of your lens on breezy days by centering the lens directly over the tripod.
Double Bubble Level. You will find one in my camera’s hot shoe whenever I am not using flash.
The Lens Align Mark II. I use the Lens Align Mark II pretty much religiously to micro-adjust all of my gear an average of once a month and always before a major trip. Enjoy our free comprehensive tutorial here.
BreezeBrowser. I do not see how any digital photographer can exist without this program.

March 27th, 2012

Ten Absolutely Free Photoshop 6 Video Tutorials!

Ask Tim Grey eNewsletter

I subscribe to the Ask Tim Grey eNewsletter on all BIRDS AS ART computers, office and laptop. Why? Tim has been the Photoshop guru for nature photographers for well more than a decade. His eNewsletters are filled with great info and tips. The last few have featured questions on what a RAW file is and is not, how color space affects RAW files (hint: it does not!), and how color space and color profiles affect your prints. I almost forgot; the e-newsletter includes links to Tim’s blog posts of interest and to upcoming teaching gigs. See below for my very favorite recent e-newsletter feature.

You can sign up to receive Tim’s missives on a regular basis by clicking here.

Note: Tim has been a guest co-leader on several BAA IPTs. He is a skilled instructor with a subtle sense of humor that always leaves me in stitches.

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Ten Absolutely Free Photoshop 6 Video Tutorials!

This from Tim’s March 22 e-newsletter:

Tim’s Grey’s Top Ten Favorite New Features in Photoshop CS6 Beta

Adobe has announced the public availability of Photoshop CS6 Beta, which offers an advance look at some cool new features.

To help photographers gain a sense of what they can expect from the new update, I’ve put together (with the help of my friends at video2brain) a free (yes, free!) video training course highlighting my top ten favorite new features in Photoshop CS6 Beta. I won’t simply list out my top ten new features, but will show you how they can be put to use, so you’ll get a better idea of all Photoshop CS6 Beta has to offer.

You can read a bit of background on this free new video course in my latest blog post here.

And you can view the video course, called “Photoshop CS6 Beta: Tim Grey’s Top 10” through my video2brain online store here.

I hope you enjoy this free video course. And of course, you can bet that as soon as a full and final updated release of Photoshop comes out, I’ll be ready with new video training courses to help you make the most of your digital photos. Stay tuned! Thank you, Tim Grey

Tutorials

Below, in descending order, are Tim’s top ten CS-6 features. I have not looked at them all yet but I am sure that my #1 fave would be the Content-Aware Move Tool and my #2 (or possibly tied for #1) would be the Improved Patch Tool. Heck, Digital Basics folks and blog and Bulletin regulars know how much I love the old Patch Tool.

The length of each video follows the title. And here is the best news of all: not only does Tim describe the new features in each video but he teaches us how to use them. Thanks Tim!

#10: Paragraph and Character Styles (04:57)
#9: Panel Updates (01:42)
#8: Auto Brightness/Contrast (01:32)
#7: Auto Curves and Levels (01:40)
#6: Perspective Crop Tool (03:10)
#5: Sample Size for Magic Wand (03:18)
#4: Crop Tool Overhaul (03:45)
#3: Content-Aware Move Tool (04:04)
#2: Improved Patch Tool (02:52)
#1: Oil Paint Filter (03:59)

Again, you need to click here to access the free video tutorials. After you’ve viewed them all let us know which new feature would be your #1 CS-6 favorite. And why.

B & H Canon Specials

Click here to learn of the fantastic Canon lens & Speedlite Double Instant Rebates. The double rebates kick in only when an item is bundled with one of three selected Canon dSLR bodies including the EOS-7D and the EOS-5D MII a(the latter saved my butt in Antarctica!) Included are lots of my favorite lenses: the Canon EF 16-35mm f/2.8L II USM AF zoom lens (save $220), my beloved Canon EF 70-200mm f/2.8L IS II USM Telephoto zoom lens (save $400!), the EF 300mm f/4.0L IS USM AF lens–great for birds and butterflies with a 7D (save $180), the EF 180mm f/3.5L Macro USM AF lens–I sent mine to Morro Bay for the California poppies (save $180), and two old faves of mine, the EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS zoom lens (save $220) and my old “toy lens”, the EF 400mm f/5.6L USM Autofocus Lens (save $180).

These offers expire at the end of the week and will not be extended so best to act now to take advantage of some great savings.

Upcoming B&H Passover Closing

Those wishing to earn contest entry credits with their B&H purchases–B&H is the principal contest sponsor–please note:

B&H will be closed Friday April 6th in observance of Passover and will reopen on Sunday April 15th at 10:00AM EST. Orders must be placed by 4:00PM EST on Thursday April 5th in order to ship before the Holiday. Orders placed after this time will ship when they reopen. We apologize for the inconvenience and appreciate your patronage.

Earn Free Contest Entries and Support both the Bulletins and the Blog by making all your B & H purchases here.

More and more folks are earning multiple contest entries with their B & H purchases. See here for details on that. Eleven great categories, 34 winning and honored images, and prize pools valued in excess of $20,000. Click here to visit the competition home page.

Shopper’s Guide

Thanks a stack to all who have used our Shopper’s Guide links to purchase their gear as a thank you for all the free information that we bring you on the Blog and in the Bulletins. Before you purchase anything be sure to check out the advice in our Shopper’s Guide.

March 25th, 2012

Best of Both Worlds...

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This image was created with the Canon 800mm f/5.L IS lens, the 1.4X III TC, a 25mm Extension Tube, and the Canon EOS-1D Mark IV. ISO 400. Evaluative metering at +1/3 stop: 1/640 sec. at f/8 in Av mode.

Central sensor (by necessity) AI Servo/Rear Focus AF on the bird’s eye and recompose. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial.

Note: by placing the teleconverter on the lens with the extension tube behind it you will get AF with this combo. If you put the extension tube in front of the TC you will be able to focus closer than if the TC were mounted in front of the tube (as above) but you will need to focus manually. These situations are discussed in detail in ABP II (916 pages on CD only).

F3C

I had a great time presenting at the F3C Conference in Naples, FL this weekend. On Friday I led a field trip (25 folks) to Tigertail Beach on Marco Island where I had done an episode of Canon Photo Safari many years ago. There were few birds but those who stayed with the group learned a ton as we went over the basics of digital exposure and histograms. Then we walked back to a Burrowing Owl nest that I had discovered the previous afternoon while scouting. The keynote address on Saturday night went quite well and I was thrilled to get a nice standing ovation :). And I finished off my work weekend with a Photoshop Image Clean-Up workshop on Sunday morning. I sold a ton of books and CDs all weekend long and a ton of Digital Basics after the Sunday workshop.

I’d be remiss without noting that on Friday evening the program was put on by a gentleman named Jimmy Keys (www.jimmykeys.com), A British Comedy Hall style entertainer. I was talked into going and boy, was I glad that I went. The guy has an amazing voice on his own–can you say Les Mis?, does killer impressions of many famous singers including two of my favorites, Billy Joel and Elton John. Heck, he sounds more like Elton John than Elton John does. Doubt me for a second? Go to the web site and click on the top video. Did I mention that Jimmy Keys is the funniest act I have ever seen? That he plays the piano like a skilled madman? The audience was howling for the entire 90 minutes. After the show I asked him how many times he had been on Letterman or Leno. He said never. I told him that he was more talented than any comedy act ever to appear on either program. If you have a corporate event or a big party, this guy travels. And he is a down-to-earth nice guy.

Lastly I had two amazing meals at two different Sushi Thai restaurants in Naples–Sushi Thai of Naples and Sushi Thai Too. The panang curry with pork was to die for. It was so good that I ordered it twice today. Once for lunch. And the second one will be my dinner tonight as soon as I finish this blog post and take a swim. I’m running late 🙂

Best of Both Worlds…

In the image above I loved the blowing grasses on the left side of the frame but not the bird looking out of the frame or the dark shadows caused by its deep-set eyes.

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Same gear, same techs.

In the image immediately above I loved the wide open eye and the bird looking to the left. But the lovely grasses has blown out of the frame. What to do?

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The optimized image, the final result.

I painted a Quick Mask of the left side of the opening image, put it on its own layer, and used the move tool to bring into the image just above. Then I added a Layer Mask and fine tuned the edges of the layer. NIK Color Efex Pro 4 Detail Extractor on the whitest parts of the neck and 50% Tonal Contrast applied to the whole image. Bill clean-up as usual but for the fact that I used some Content Aware Fill for the bill clean-up and was quite impressed.

I just love the result.

Learn the basics of Quick Masking and Layer Masking in Digital Basics along with my complete digital workflow. The next update coming no later than May will include basic NIK Color Efex Pro turorials.

Earn Free Contest Entries and Support both the Bulletins and the Blog by making all your B & H purchases here.

More and more folks are earning multiple contest entries with their B & H purchases. See here for details on that. Eleven great categories, 34 winning and honored images, and prize pools valued in excess of $20,000. Click here to visit the competition home page.

Shopper’s Guide

Below is a list of the gear used to create the images in today’s post. Thanks a stack to all who have used the Shopper’s Guide links to purchase their gear as a thank you for all the free information that we bring you on the Blog and in the Bulletins. Before you purchase anything be sure to check out the advice in our Shopper’s Guide.

Canon 800mm f/5.L IS lens. Right now this is my all time favorite super-telephoto lens.
Canon EF 1.4X III TC. This new TC is designed to work best with the new Series II super-telephoto lenses.
25mm Extension Tube. This vaulable accessory allows for closer focusing.
Canon EOS-1D Mark IV professional digital camera body. The very best professional digital camera body that I have ever used.

And from the BAA On-line Store:

LensCoats. I have a LensCoat on each of my big lenses to protect them from nicks and thus increase their re-sales value. All my big lens LensCoat stuff is in Hardwood Snow pattern.
LegCoat Tripod Leg Covers. I have four tripods active and each has a Hardwood Snow LegCoat on it to help prevent further damage to my tender shoulders 🙂 And you will love them in mega-cold weather….
Gitzo GT3530LS Tripod. This one will last you a lifetime.
Mongoose M3.6 Tripod Head. Right now this is the best tripod head around for use with lenses that weigh less than 9 pounds. For heavier lenses, check out the Wimberley V2 head.
CR-80 Replacement Foot for Canon 800. When using the 800 on a Mongoose as I do, replacing the lens foot with this accessory lets the lens sit like a dog whether pointed up or down and prevents wind-blown spinning of your lens on breezy days by centering the lens directly over the tripod.
Double Bubble Level. You will find one in my camera’s hot shoe whenever I am not using flash.
The Lens Align Mark II. I use the Lens Align Mark II pretty much religiously to micro-adjust all of my gear an average of once a month and always before a major trip. Enjoy our free comprehensive tutorial here.
Canon EOS-1D Mark IV User’s Guide. Learn to use your Mark IV the way that I use mine. Also available for the 7D and the Mark III here.
BreezeBrowser. I do not see how any digital photographer can exist without this program.

March 24th, 2012

A Bad Morning on the Hooptie Deux...

This image of a breeding plumage Roseate Spoonbill was created at 7:55 am with the with the tripod-mounted Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens and the Canon EOS-1D Mark IV. ISO 400. Evaluative metering -1/3 stops as framed: 1/800 sec. at f/5.6 in Manual mode.

Central Sensor/AI Servo Rear Focus on the bird’s lower breast active at the moment of exposure. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to enjoy a larger version.

This bird had sneaked out of the mangroves to my right; I would have missed the shot had James not alerted me. Thanks Froggie!

A Bad Morning on the Hooptie Deux is Still a Pretty Darned Good Morning

By the time that I got to the dock with the repair gear James was already there; he had jury-rigged a repair with a plastic bag and some zipper wax and limped back to the boat ramp. In short order the job was done. I loaded my gear and we were underway. It was a clear morning with a breeze from the southeast. The wind was from the perfect direction for flight photography but as the sun rose the breeze freshened to about 20 knots. Instead of landing on the flat in front of us as we had so carefully planned the spoonies and large numbers of White Ibises landed in the more sheltered cove to our left where we were unable to get our lenses on them. So we settled for a great morning of flight photography albeit without as many chances for Roesate Spoonbills as you would expect on a typical late March morning.

This tight-in-the-frame flight image of a Roseate Spoonbill was created at 8:35am with the with the tripod-mounted Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens and the Canon EOS-1D Mark IV. ISO 400. Evaluative metering +2 stops off the light blue sky: 1/2000 sec. at f/5.6 in Manual mode.

Central Sensor/AI Servo Rear Focus active at the moment of exposure. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to enjoy a larger version.

This image was a result of my taking a more aggressive approach to flight and action photography; in the past, I would have passed on this opportunity figuring that I would not be able to fit the whole bird in the frame. See here for details on that. I will share the original with you in the next blog post. I moved the bird back in the frame using APTATS II techniques and darkened the sky using Viveza with Control Points.

This breeding plumage Brown Pelican image was created at 8:44am with the tripod-mounted Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens and the Canon EOS-1D Mark IV. ISO 400. Evaluative metering +2 stops off the light blue sky: 1/1600 sec. at f/5.6 in Manual mode.

Central Sensor/AI Servo Rear Focus active at the moment of exposure. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to enjoy a larger version.

When the wind direction is right and the pelicans are coming in with their landing gear down, press and hold the shutter button to ensure a variety of poses. Detail Extractor and Tonal Contrast both at 50% with NIK Color Efex Pro on the bird only (selected with the Quick Selection Tool).

This incoming American Oystercatcher was photographed at 9:12am with the tripod-mounted Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens and the Canon EOS-1D Mark IV. ISO 400. Evaluative metering +1 2/3 stops off the light blue sky: 1/2000 sec. at f/5.6 in Manual mode.

Central Sensor/AI Servo Rear Focus active at the moment of exposure. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to enjoy a larger version.

This species almost always alerts you to their presence with their strident flight calls. As is usual this bird, one of a fly-by pair, announced itself long before flying into photographic range. Long lens flight photography tip: make sure that your distance range limit switch is set to far focus only so that the lens does not have to search all the way down to minimum focusing distance. This drastically reduces the time needed for initial focusing acquisition.

This small-in-the-frame/environmental image was created at 7:46am with the tripod-mounted Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens and the Canon EOS-1D Mark IV. ISO 1600. Evaluative metering +2 1/3 stops off the sky (-1 stop as framed): 1/640 sec. at f/5.6 in Manual mode.

Central Sensor/AI Servo Rear Focus on the White Ibis and recompose. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to enjoy a larger version.

I was set up for early morning flight photography when I noticed the ibis walking by the lone spoonbill. I rear focused on the ibis, swung the lens to the left, and when the compositional balance was pretty close to perfect fired off two frames. The Small-in-the-Frame/Environmental category is one of the weakest in the BIRDS AS ART 1st International Bird Photography Competition. The deadline is coming up soon; If you have some great small in the frame habitat images be sure to enter for a chance at some of the great prizes in the $22,000+ prize pool and lots of honor and glory as well :). For lots more info see “The Contest Heats Up.” Item 1 here.

This image of a breeding plumage Brown Pelican carrying nesting material was created at 8:13am with the tripod-mounted Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens and the Canon EOS-1D Mark IV. ISO 400. Evaluative metering +2 2/3 stops off the very light blue sky: 1/800 sec. at f/5.6 in Manual mode.

Central Sensor/AI Servo Rear Focus active at the moment of exposure. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to enjoy a larger version.

About half the flying pelicans were carrying nesting material and with the south/southeast wind flight photography was superb. By studying the exposure data and the time that each image was made you can learn that as the morning wore on it was correct to add less and less light to the exposure reading off the sky.

Comments Welcome

Please feel free to leave a comment on all or any of the above. If you have a favorite, be sure to let us know why you like it.

James Shadle and the Hooptie Deux

I am always amazed when folks who visit Florida for the express purpose of photographing Roseate Spoonbill go home disappointed. To say that Ding Darling ain’t what it used to be is a vast understatement…. If you want to photograph lots of spoonbills all that you need to do is spend a few days with James Shadle on his photo-customized pontoon boat, the Hooptie Deux. Click here and scroll down for complete details and to see some of James’ incredible images from Alafia Banks.

James’ “In the Field Workshops” is the original Tampa Bay nature photography (by boat) workshop and tour leader. He has an exciting list of locations that will give you the opportunity to create incredible images of dramatic behavior and stunning plumages. He knows the bay better than anyone as he has been doing it longer than anyone and as the images show, he knows how to make great pictures and can teach you to do the same. James owns and operates a 20′ tri-toon boat (The Hooptie Deux) that has been customized specifically for photography workshops. It’s roomy, comfortable, and stable. The boat is equipped with a quiet and environmentally friendly E-Tec outboard motor. It also has a powerful, silent, electric trolling motor with wireless remote control. The boat can be configured with no top for on-board photography or with a bimini top to provide shelter from sun and rain. Refreshments are available at all times.

Call or e-mail in advance to inquire about dates and rates. You can get in touch with James for additional info or to schedule a Custom Workshop or Tour via e-mail, by cell phone at (813) 363-2854 or on his home phone (early evenings best) at (813-689-5307). If by cell phone it is best to call back rather than to leave a message.

If you plan on joining James make sure to read “Hooptie Deux Practicalities” by scrolling down here.

Earn Free Contest Entries and Support both the Bulletins and the Blog by making all your B & H purchases here.

More and more folks are earning multiple contest entries with their B & H purchases. See here for details on that. Eleven great categories, 34 winning and honored images, and prize pools valued in excess of $20,000. Click here to visit the competition home page.

Shopper’s Guide

Below is a list of gear that I used to create the image in this blog post. Thanks a stack to all who have used the Shopper’s Guide links to purchase their gear as a thank you for all the free information that we bring you on the Blog and in the Bulletins. Before you purchase anything be sure to check out the advice in our Shopper’s Guide.

Canon 800mm f/5.L IS lens. Right now this is my all time favorite super-telephoto lens.
Canon EF 1.4X III TC. This new TC is designed to work best with the new Series II super-telephoto lenses.
Canon EOS-1D Mark IV professional digital camera body. My two Mark IVs are my workhorse digital camera bodies.

And from the BAA On-line Store:

LensCoats. I have a LensCoat on each of my big lenses to protect them from nicks and thus increase their re-sales value. All my big lens LensCoat stuff is in Hardwood Snow pattern.
LegCoat Tripod Leg Covers. I have four tripods active and each has a Hardwood Snow LegCoat on it to help prevent further damage to my tender shoulders 🙂 And you will love them in mega-cold weather….
Gitzo GT3530LS Tripod. This one will last you a lifetime.
Mongoose M3.6 Tripod Head. Right now this is the best tripod head around for use with lenses that weigh less than 9 pounds. For heavier lenses, check out the Wimberley V2 head.
CR-80 Replacement Foot for Canon 800. When using the 800 on a Mongoose as I do, replacing the lens foot with this accessory lets the lens sit like a dog whether pointed up or down and prevents wind-blown spinning of your lens on breezy days by centering the lens directly over the tripod.
Double Bubble Level. You will find one in my camera’s hot shoe whenever I am not using flash.
The Lens Align Mark II. I use the Lens Align Mark II pretty much religiously to micro-adjust all of my gear an average of once a month and always before a major trip. Enjoy our free comprehensive tutorial here.
Canon EOS-1D Mark IV User’s Guide. Learn to use your Mark IV the way that I use mine. Also available for the 7D and the Mark III here.
BreezeBrowser. I do not see how any digital photographer can exist without this program.

March 22nd, 2012

Froggie Repairs...

White Ibis in flight. Alafia Banks, on the Hooptie Deux. It is a composite made from 3 consecutive flight images. I took the best features of each 🙂 Probably with the Canon 600mm f/4L IS lens and the EOS-1Ds Mark II. On the tripod with a Mongoose.

I was headed west on State Road 60 headed for Gibsonton for an early morning with the spoonbills and White Ibises on the Hooptie Deux with my good friend and BPN founding partner James Shadle aka Froggie when my cell phone rang at about 5:45am of course. I had finally slept to the alarm which rang at 3:30 am. On Tuesday evening I had stayed up until 1am, wide awake after napping from 8:30 am till 1:30 pm; can you say Japanese jet lag? I was surprised to hear from James.

Anyway, back to the main story. “I took the boat for a test run and the fuel line sprang a leak. Go to Lowes just off I75 at Gibsonton Road and pick my up a 3/8” inch splice barb from plumbing. They open at 6am. Once you get to the dock have someone bring it out to me. I am stuck at the first marker bouy, #15. After that it will take me 5 minutes to make the repairs. I got to Lowes at 6:04 am. Perfect. Only they did not look open. They were not. They open at 7am. New hours. So not much to do but hook up the laptop to my car plane charger, get on line with my Droid, and share my exciting morning.

If all goes well we should be out to Alafia Banks just after sunrise. As I say often, you gotta love it. Well, it is 6:53 am and I am headed into Lowe’s; wish us luck!

White Ibis pre-dawn jiggle blur. Alafia Banks, on the Hooptie Deux. Probably with the Canon 70-200mm f/4L IS, the 1.4X III TC, and the EOS-1D Mark III. Hand held.

Which Image Do You Like Best?

Take a moment to let us know which of the two images you like best, and why.

BAA Bulletin #403

BAA Bulletin #403 is On-liine now and can be accessed here. See the exciting contest news!

March 20th, 2012

Teaching and Learning Creativity; A Great Example

This image, a pleasing blur of the sharply rendered leg of a tame Great Blue Heron, was created at Blind Pass Beach on the SW FLA IPT by Clemens van der Werf with the tripod-mounted Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens and the Canon EOS-1D Mark IV. ISO 50. Evaluative metering +1 2/3 stops: 1/15 sec. at f22 in Manual mode.

Central Sensor/AI Servo Rear Focus on the bird’s leg and recompose. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to enjoy a larger, more spectacular version.

Image copyright 2012 and courtesy of Clemens van der Werf.

Teaching and Learning Creativity; A Great Example

As regular readers know, I am very proud of my friend and student Clemens van der Werf. Aside from being a super-nice guy Clemens is a mega-serious student of bird and nature photography. He has been on a zillion IPTs during the past two years. And he is headed back to Homer, AL today to join Robert O’Toole on another Bald Eagle trip, his second. Clemens’ work has been featured in several blog posts including Mystery Photographer and Skill Level Revealed, IPT Student Getting Too Good? Part I With Image Critiques, and IPT Student Getting Too Good? Part II With Image Critiques. The latter two posts feature 5 of Clemens’ best Bear Boat images with critiques on an additional 27. Studying good critiques is a great way to learn. If you are inspired to join me on the Bear Boat trip this July see item three below.

In Part I above I wrote, “The short story is that Clemens has been on virtually every IPT since attending the 2010 SW FLA IPT (now twice). He has been on the Homer IPT, the Bosque IPT (now twice), the San Diego IPT, the JBWR/Nickerson IPT, and most recently he attended the 2011 Bear Boat IPT. Prior to his first IPT he had photographed only sailboats, his dogs, and his daughter. His skills have improved steadily. The problem is that he is getting too good. His Coastal Brown Bear images from the recently concluded Photo-Cruise reflect continuing growth in all areas of his photography. His exposures are pretty much perfect, he has perfected his sharpness techniques, and he makes all the obvious images. But his biggest area of improvement has been in seeing and creating new and different images.

It was on the 2010 Bsoque IPT that Clemens was first exposed to blurs. The very talented Denise Ippolito was along. It was a slow morning. Just past the Chupadera Deck I stopped the group and got out with my Canon 70-200mm f/2.8L IS II lens, the 1.4X III TC, and the EOS-1D Mark IV. Everyone including Clemens looked at me like I was nuts. “There are no birds. Why are we stopping here?” My eye had been attracted to a tall stand of orange-red vegetation. I set a low ISO, picked a slow shutter speed in Tv Mode, added 1 1/3 stops of light, and began creating hand held vertical pan blurs. When I shared them on the back of the camera with the group–you gotta love the immediacy of digital capture–most folks joined in the fun. Denise also ledby example Before long most everyone was experimenting with pan blurs, zoom blurs, jiggle blurs, and flame blurs. Everyone including Clemens. And the look on his face made it clear that he was hooked on blurs.

That brings us to today’s image. Here once again the student has taken what he’s learned, applied it to a new situation, and created something very special. Clemens converted the image to black and white with NIK’s killer Silver Efex Pro plug-in. And he has entered it in the 2012 Veolia BBC Wildlife Photographer of the Year Competition in the Black and White category. Good luck Clemens! (It will not be long until Clemens garners his first BBC honors.)

If you’d like to learn to create pleasing blurs, check out A Guide to Pleasing Blurs by Denise Ippolito and yours truly. We cover dozens of different techniques that you can learn and use; Clemens’ image here is a moving water blur.

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TIME IS RUNNING OUT!

The deadline (March 31, 2012) for the BIRDS AS ART 1st International Bird Photography Competition is fast approaching. Enter now and get your images uploaded for a chance a the $22,000 worth of great prizes. And lots of prestige.

  • Here are the contest categories:
    1. Bird Portraits (images that show the whole bird)
    2. Tight Portraits and Body Parts (head shots, feather detail, and more)
    3. Flight (dramatic images of birds in flight)
    4. Small in the frame/Environmental (images of a bird or flocks of birds in their natural habitat)
    5. Pleasing Blurs (pleasingly blurred images of a bird or a flock of birds; images in this category must be created in-camera.)
    6. Action (Photographs of a bird or birds in action)
    7. Behavior (Images that exhibit interesting avian behavior)
    8. Hand of Man (the composition must include man-made elements)
    9. Digital Creations (anything goes including the use of filters and effects as long as there is a bird or birds in the image)
    10. Youth (images submitted by young photographers born on or after March 31, 1994)
    11. Captive including zoos (photographs of captive, zoo, pet, or rehab birds)

    SELECTED IPT INFO

    Join me this summer and live on a boat for six full and two half days of Coastal Brown (Grizzly) Bear photography. At close range. Live your dream. Great food too! Images copyright Arthur Morris & Robert O’Toole. If you are seriously interested please e-mail for itinerary and additional details.

    KATMAI BEAR BOAT IPT: July 24-31, 2012 from Kodiak, AK: $6699. Limit 6/Openings 3. Coastal Brown Bears (Grizzlies) Galore!

    Coastal Brown Bears at point blank range foraging & clamming with a good chance of copulations; cubs nursing and playing. Likely additional subjects include Horned and Tufted Puffins, nesting Bald Eagle and Black-legged Kittiwake, Steller’s Sea Lion, rafts of Sea Otters and more. Halibut fishing optional.

    BOSQUE del APACHE 2012 IPT: “The Complete Bosque Experience.” NOV 21-27, 2012. 7-FULL DAYS: $3399. Introductory Slide program: 6:30 pm on 11/20. Limit: 12/Openings: 10/Openings 8.

    Tens of thousand of Snow Geese, 10,000 Sandhill Cranes, ducks including point-blank American Wigeon and Wood Duck, amazing sunrises, sunsets, and blast-offs. Live, eat, and breathe photography with one of (if not the) world’s premier photographic educators at one of his very favorite locations on the planet. Top-notch Photoshop instruction. This will make 18 consecutive Novembers at Bosque for me. Nobody knows the place better than I do. Join us to learn to think like a pro, to recognize situations and to anticipate them based on the weather, especially the light and the wind direction. Every time we make a move we will let you know why. When you head home applying what you learned will prove to be invaluable.

    Earn Free Contest Entries and Support both the Bulletins and the Blog by making all your B & H purchases here.

    More and more folks are earning multiple contest entries with their B & H purchases. See here for details on that. Eleven great categories, 34 winning and honored images, and prize pools valued in excess of $20,000. Click here to visit the competition home page.

    Shopper’s Guide

    Below is a list of gear that I used to create the image in this blog post. Thanks a stack to all who have used the Shopper’s Guide links to purchase their gear as a thank you for all the free information that we bring you on the Blog and in the Bulletins. Before you purchase anything be sure to check out the advice in our Shopper’s Guide.

    Canon 800mm f/5.L IS lens. Right now this is my all time favorite super-telephoto lens.
    Canon EOS-1D Mark IV professional digital camera body. My two Mark IVs are my workhorse digital camera bodies.

    And from the BAA On-line Store:

    LensCoats. I have a LensCoat on each of my big lenses to protect them from nicks and thus increase their re-sales value. All my big lens LensCoat stuff is in Hardwood Snow pattern.
    LegCoat Tripod Leg Covers. I have four tripods active and each has a Hardwood Snow LegCoat on it to help prevent further damage to my tender shoulders 🙂 And you will love them in mega-cold weather….
    Gitzo GT3530LS Tripod. This one will last you a lifetime.
    Mongoose M3.6 Tripod Head. Right now this is the best tripod head around for use with lenses that weigh less than 9 pounds. For heavier lenses, check out the Wimberley V2 head.
    CR-80 Replacement Foot for Canon 800. When using the 800 on a Mongoose as I do, replacing the lens foot with this accessory lets the lens sit like a dog whether pointed up or down and prevents wind-blown spinning of your lens on breezy days by centering the lens directly over the tripod.
    Double Bubble Level. You will find one in my camera’s hot shoe whenever I am not using flash.
    The Lens Align Mark II. I use the Lens Align Mark II pretty much religiously to micro-adjust all of my gear an average of once a month and always before a major trip. Enjoy our free comprehensive tutorial here.
    Canon EOS-1D Mark IV User’s Guide. Learn to use your Mark IV the way that I use mine. Also available for the 7D and the Mark III here.
    BreezeBrowser. I do not see how any digital photographer can exist without this program.

  • March 18th, 2012

    Bad Luck/Worse Luck; Bye Bye Birdies

    This Steller’s Sea Eagle in flight was photographed in Rausu, Hokkaido, Japan with the hand held Canon 300mm f/2.8 L IS II lens and the Canon EOS-1D Mark IV. ISO 400. Evaluative metering +2/3 stop off the ice: 1/2500 sec. at f/8 in Manual mode.

    Central Sensor/AI Servo Rear Focus active at the moment of exposure. Expand AF points left and right as noted in the Mark IV User’s Guide. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image for a larger version.

    Bad Luck/Worse Luck

    One of the big challenges on the sea eagle boat was isolating the subject. At times, it was impossible. My advice to the group was that when they did have other birds in the frame that they try to avoid merges. I did that with the bad luck image above. When I saw the image on the back of the camera I was pretty sure that I could do something with it. When I saw it on the computer I marveled at the sharpness and the beautiful dorsal view the wings; I knew that I had to do something to salvage it.

    With the worse luck image below, I could not conceive of a way to try to save it.

    Same bird, same gear, same exposure data. I thought that this was the same bird depicted in the first image but it is actually a different individual. The action must have been fast and furious as this image was created only 37/100ths of after the image above. With a bit of luck this one could have been spectacular.

    Image Optimization

    In the animated GIF below you can see the before and after images.

    Bye Bye Birdies

    There is lots to learn by studying the animated GIF above so be sure to let it cycle through at least a few times. I covered each of the two offending birds with two or three transformed Quick Masks. I have been working on a new trick where I paint a mask next to the object that needs to be covered, put it on its own Layer, hit Control T, and then drag one of the handles to stretch the layer over the object that needs to be covered. Here I moved the layer before stretching it. And I created at least one mask on each side of each of the two birds. Each mask was refined with a regular layer mask. After each new layer was merged I eliminated any obvious repeat patterns using the Patch Tool.

    The basics of Quick Masking, Layer Masking and image clean-up are covered in detail in Digital Basics, an e-mailable PDF that includes my complete digital workflow and dozens of great Photoshop tips and tricks. Advanced Quick Masking Techniques are covered in Robert O’Toole’s APTATS II.

    Hello Color Efex Pro

    Now go back to the animated GIF and check out the BLACKs. Note the increased detail and contrast. That was done with a Tonal Contrast layer at 100% from NIK’s Color Efex Pro plug-in with the Midtones and Shadows sliders each moved about 15 points to the right. Note the increased detail and density in the WHITEs, especially on the leading edge of the wing. That was done with a 50% Detail Extractor layer, again with the NIK Color Efex Pro plug-in. With that filter on its own layer, I added a layer mask and erased 50% of the effect on the white areas of the upper wing as they had become somewhat greyed out. I left the full effect on the leading edge of the wing which was super-bright white in the original even with no RBG values above 235. A Color Efex Selection tutorial follows.

    This is the optimized version. Though it seems like a lot of work the total time in Photoshop was less than 15 minutes. I just love the killer view of the upper wing, back, and tail surfaces. Click on the image to see a spectacular larger version.

    Color Efex Selection Tutorial

    Lots of folks rave about the + and – Control Points in the various NIK plug-ins. Those of course include Color Efex Pro. I have been practicing using the control points and am getting better. For selections with less than sharp edges they do a beautiful job of masking. But for images like the one here today it makes much more sense to me to make your selections using the Quick Selection Tool. I click-drag a rather small + brush along the edges and then release the cursor. Most times with the strong black and white delineations that we see here I make a perfect selection on the first try. If not, you can work with a smaller – brush to refine the selection. In the screen below you can see that the marching ants have made a perfect selection of the blacks and the bird’s bill. (Being a screen capture the ants of course are not marching. But they are visible.)

    When working with high contrast edges it is faster and easier to work with the Quick Selection Tool than with Control Points.

    Any Questions?

    Please feel free to leave any questions or comments below.

    NIK

    As regular readers know NIK’s Color Efex Pro 4 is now an integral part of my workflow. You can save 15% on all NIK products by clicking here and entering BAA in the Promo Code box at check-out. Then hit Apply to see your savings. You can download a trial copy that will work for 15 days and allow you to create full sized images.

    Earn Free Contest Entries and Support both the Bulletins and the Blog by making all your B & H purchases here.

    More and more folks are earning multiple contest entries with their B & H purchases. See here for details on that. Eleven great categories, 34 winning and honored images, and prize pools valued in excess of $20,000. Click here to visit the competition home page.

    Shopper’s Guide

    Below is a list of the gear used to create the image above. Thanks a stack to all who have used the Shopper’s Guide links to purchase their gear as a thank you for all the free information that we bring you on the Blog and in the Bulletins. Before you purchase anything be sure to check out the advice in our Shopper’s Guide.

    Canon 300mm f/2.8 L IS II lens. The 300 f/2.8 L IS II alone is amazingly sharp even wide open.
    Canon EOS-1D Mark IV professional digital camera body. My two Mark IVs are my workhorse digital camera bodies.

    And from the BAA On-line Store:

    LensCoats. I have a LensCoat on each of my big lenses to protect them from nicks and thus increase their re-sales value. All my big lens LensCoat stuff is in Hardwood Snow pattern.
    The Lens Align Mark II. I use the Lens Align Mark II pretty much religiously to micro-adjust all of my gear an average of once a month and always before a major trip. Enjoy our free comprehensive tutorial here.
    Canon EOS-1D Mark IV User’s Guide. Learn to use your Mark IV the way that I use mine. Also available for the 7D, the Mark III, and for Nikon dSLRs here.
    BreezeBrowser. I do not see how any digital photographer can exist without this program.

    March 17th, 2012

    Oldie But Goodie

    Oldie But Goodie

    While searching online for information on the recent death of my old friend Bob Elliot Kutner the other day (scroll down here for info on that), I came across an old (2005) interview that I did for James Morrissey for The Nature, Wildlife and Pet Photography Forum and wanted to share an adapted and somewhat updated version here with you. You can find the original interview by James along with four images here.

    Artist Showcase: Artie Morris by James Morrissey

    About Artie Morris

    JM: Can you tell me about yourself?

    AM: I had a very nice childhood. I did not realize how messed up my childhood was until I was an adult 🙂 When I was a kid, I had a whole lot of fun.

    I had no early photographic interests. My parents had no interest in nature. I lived in Brooklyn. When I was a young boy, my great aunt Alice and my great uncle Frank would go to Keyport, New Jersey where my great grandma Smith lived. By the time, I was 12 or 13 I would go by myself to Keyport with my Alice and Frank to a Great Grandma Smith’s home. I would collect butterflies, bugs, and box turtles. I used to cut the huge lawn. This was my first experience in nature. I would have told you that bird watching was for sissies when I was young.

    JM: What brought you to photography then?

    AM: I had two daughters by my first marriage and I wanted to take pictures of them… I purchased a Canon AE-1 and was doing snap shots of the kids and some scenics when I went on vacation. I shot perhaps 10 rolls of film during the first few years that I owned the camera. People had told me in the past, when I was in Junior HS, that I was artistically talented, but I had pretty much ignored it; whatever talent I had had lain dormant within me. In 1976, when I was in my early 30s, I started birding as a means of exercise as my knees were shot and my back was not in great shape.

    I was inspired by a fellow named Bob Elliot Kutner from the South Shore Audubon Society in Long Island, NY. He was infectiously enthusiastic. He met a bunch of teachers from my school–including my late-wife Elaine Belsky-Morris and invited himself to our school and did an assembly program with his back-yard movies of Warblers. They were terrible, but he was so into it that it rubbed off. I wound up doing a few field trips with him, and that is how I got started.

    JM: So your photographic education started well after you were a professional with the NYC Board of Education?

    AM: Yes. I had the camera, but rarely used it. Early on I was influenced by two local guys – Tom Davis, who is dead, and an older Eastern European man named Tony Manzoni. They were both into photography. Tom was a recluse – 6′ 9”, 149 lbs. One time he took out his book of ‘baby pictures.’ They were juvenile shorebirds; he called them his “babies.” After I went to a slide show by Toni Manzoni, I said, “I can do that.” Then, I went out and purchased the Canon 400 f/4.5 FD lens.

    Birding was something that developed in me over time after many seeds had been planted in my brain. The first seed was planted by Elliot Kutner, and the next by Tom Davis. I used to work at a pool club in Brooklyn and I would see Great Egrets and Snowy Egrets fishing. After seven years I was getting bored with just birding and took up photography as the next step.

    My first marriage–to Dana–ended in 1985 after 18 years. We had two beautiful daughters – Jennifer and Alissa. Soon after my divorce, I married Elaine Belsky, a fellow teacher who had been my best friend for 15 years. I talked her into getting out of teaching in 1992. We got a sabbatical from the board of education, bought a small motor home, and drove twice around North America. Being married to Elaine was like being in heaven. After the sabbatical we returned home on June 30, 1993. If anyone had told me that she was going to find a lump in her left breast the next day and that she would be dead in 15 months, I would have fallen off my chair laughing. I would have said, “I am Artie Morris and this does not happen to me. I am blessed with complete happiness.” That is, however, exactly what happened. It was an horrific blow to me. Elaine died peacefully at home on November 20, 1994. I was a huge mess for seven years.

    Ten days after Elaine died, I flew to Bosque Del Apache NWR in New Mexico and began the long, slow process of healing. It took me more than 7 years to get to the point where I could look back and think about how wonderful she was without crying. It was hard for a long time. Once I began doing The Work of Byron Katie I realized however that I had actively chosen to be a martyr. I was doing my best…. Doing the work brought me to peace over Elaine’s death.

    A few years after Elaine’s passing I moved from Deltona, FL down to Indian Lake Estates. In about 1998 I hired my older daughter Jennifer as the Executive Director of BIRDS AS ART; her husband, Erik, works as a biologist at a nearby state park. They are the proud parents of my first two grandchildren.

    JM: How do you feel that Elaine’s death affected your photography?

    AM: Elaine had great confidence that I would succeed as a professional photographer. Many wives might say, “Oh my God, he is crazy. He gets up at 5 in the morning and stays out all day. He is nuts.” Elaine would say, “My Arthur. He gets up at 4 in the morning and he works so hard, and he stays out all day and photographs. He is going to be the best bird photographer in the world some day.” Her support meant the world to me. She was the first person to tell me, “You are good, you are handsome, you are loyal, you are loving, and you are smart.” I have done a lot of work since then and learned that I am all of those things and more.

    JM: A lot of people never get to that point.

    AM: I have done a lot of great self-help stuff. There is a great book entitled “Seeing Your Life Through New Eyes.” In addition, as I mentioned above, I have studied The Work of Byron Katie; her program, “Loving What Is” helped me find a great degree of peace.

    JM: What drives you?

    AM: Primarily, the fact that bird photography is fun. It is what I love to do. On another level, I have realized that my father influenced me positively in a convoluted way. He was a WWII veteran who had been severely injured on Okinawa; he lost his right arm and his left hung by a thread at one point. He spent 19 months in the hospital. He was bitter about his war injuries and we did not have a good relationship. He rarely had anything nice to say to me as I was growing up. I sometimes say somewhat jokingly that the nicest thing that he ever said to me was “Take out the damned garbage.” I didn’t realize how deeply this affected me until I was in my forties.

    Why did I want to be the best teacher in the district? Why would I rather have died than lose a game of 3-man basketball? Why did I practice golf for 12 hours every day while playing on my college team? With everything that I have ever done, I have been driven to push myself to the max. In middle adulthood I realized that all along I had been trying to get people to say the nice things about me that my father never could or did. A few years before his death, I wrote him and thanked him for withholding praise, for being responsible for so much of my success. I thanked him for being a mean son of a bitch. My sister Arna read the letter to him and told me that he had a huge smile on his face. My Dad never quit. He worked in the same luggage store for more than 30 years and wound up as the manager. Many folks would have simply stayed home and collected their disability payments. I know that I got my determination from him. He was well respected in the industry. Stamps were his hobby. I can remember seeing him in the basement holding up the little squares of perforated paper and examining them with a magnifier. When I turned to photography and found myself sitting for hours on end editing slides with a loupe I chuckled at the similarities.

    I am now at the point that I know I have an incredibly wonderful life. I don’t have the need for approval or the need for people to say nice things about me. When it happens though, it is certainly a nice part of the job.

    Part of me is still driven to prove Elaine right. When I was in my 20s and 30s, I felt that I got ripped off in that I had no great talent. I would listen to Simon and Garfunkel singing some great song, or I would go to a show and watch talented people perform. I was envious. I wished that I had a talent. I started doing bird photography in 1983 and soon afterwards began doing slideshows. I would click up one of my images onto the screen, and people would ooh and ah. It was amazing; I was able to move people. I started adding humor to my shows. Since then, I have done more than 250 programs. When people marvel at my images or laugh at my jokes, it sure feels good.

    JM: What kind of slideshows were these?

    AM: As you know, I am a Canon contract photographer, an Explorer of Light. It is a wonderful program and they are quite generous to a large number of photographers worldwide. People call me up and say, “We would like you to speak at this or that festival or event.” I offer a variety of photography how-to and general interest programs. As long as we get 100 folks in the room Canon sponsors these speaking engagements. When people ask me how it all got started I trace it all back to the first slideshow I did in 1985 for the Queens County Bird Club. I got paid 10 dollars. Every bit of networking can be traced to that first show. It just grew.

    At some point I began adding humor to my shows. One time, I spoke before 700 or 800 people in Cape May, NJ, Paul Kerlinger, the director of Cape May Bird Observatory, got up and said, “This is Artie Morris. It is hard to tell if he is one of the best bird photographers in the world or a standup comedian.” It helped that I had had a few whiskey sours before that program…. Now, I have spoken several times to audiences of between 400 and 700 people and have always found them to be enthralled with both the photographs and with the spiel. It was great to discover that I had had these gifts. And it was quite a thrill that to discover them rather late in life.

    JM: I would imagine that you always had to be on stage when you were a teacher.

    AM: To a degree teachers are on stage, but teaching was less satisfying and was much harder work, much harder than photography. The first 6 or 7 years I did not know what I was doing. For the 10 years after that I was a great teacher, but for the last 6 or 7 years I was burned out. Now I speak at a lot of birding and photography festivals. I get paid for these appearances and speaking has become an important part of my business. In addition to my honorarium, I have a sales table for the books, prints and photo accessories that we peddle. And I always get a plane ticket and a motel room for a few nights. Speaking engagements have become a great source of income for me, and I enjoy doing them immensely.

    Tours are another facet of my business that I thoroughly enjoy. At a NANPA conference I once heard my friend John Shaw say, “If you think that you are going to make any decent money leading tours, forget it.” But he talks about it in terms of leading a tour for a big tour company and getting a free trip and $150-$200 a day. The trips are good ones and he gets to make lots of great images, but the money is simply not there. Not to worry, John Shaw is one of the world’s great nature photographers and he makes money in other ways.

    Now, there is no question about it, if you go on one of those expensive tours they can take you to great places, places where I could not go because of the complex logistics involved. You are, however, paying those big tour companies for a large color catalog and a staff of 25 people. If you were going to Bosque with me you will learn a hell of a lot more from me than you would by joining a glitzy company tour. I put my heart and soul into my IPTs (Instructional Photo Tours). Ellen Anon, a very competent instructor and Photoshop expert, helped me out for years and now Robert O’Toole, a talented young photographer from LA helps me out on others. I have an amazing amount of repeat business. 50-60% of the folks that join us wind up coming back for more. If you are getting people back, it means that they are loving the experience and that you are doing things right.

    I push myself because I love what I do. I am a people-person and I enjoy photographing with others. I would rather photograph with a group than by myself.

    JM: This makes you very different from a lot of other nature photographers.

    AM: Yes, I know. A lot of photographers need solitude. I don’t even like photographing by myself. I almost never do it.

    Another thing about my chosen profession is that the schedule can be somewhat grueling. The way things worked out, I had been killing myself with Oreo cookies for 40 years (and doing a great job of it!) I met a doctor from San Diego who changed my life by getting me on a program of good nutrition, exercise, and a healthier lifestyle. I have been following this program for 15 years now; working with Dr. Cliff Oliver has enabled me to maintain a grueling pace.

    Another big factor in my success has been my determination (thanks Dad!) It is the number one factor – even above self-promotion and the quality of my images. If you believe you can do it, then you can and will do it. Many people say “Oh, it is so hard to break into professional photography.” I say “Good. Fine. Keep on believing that.”

    Another thing in the same vein: People read the original “The Art of Bird Photography,” and say, “Oh. I am going to find out how Art photographs birds.” People who like basket weaving might say, “Oh, look, here’s Millie Thompson’s book on the best basket weaving techniques.” Instead, folks need to look into the hearts and souls of those who have achieved great success. In every case they will find that those who have made it were driven to succeed and that they worked very hard to achieve that success.

    JM: I know that when I learn more about the individual it does amazing things for me in terms of appreciating their work and their success.

    AM: That makes sense to me. I forgot to mention that whenever I push the shutter button I do it to create something beautiful, something dramatic. The greatest compliment that you can get is when others are moved by your work. I never push the shutter button thinking, “This will be good for a two-page spread because they will have room for text.” I never shoot for the market. I make images to please myself. Looking at the overall picture, it makes me laugh: I am just a regular Jewish kid from Brooklyn. I don’t have any more talent than the next person. I just like to work hard and have been doing that for nearly three decades now.

    JM: You have had such longevity. You are doing something right – I am not sure if you even know what it is.

    AM: Oh, I know what it is. Busting my hump and working hard. That’s all it is. That, and loving what I do. Why do I love the birds so much? I don’t know for sure. They are free, they can fly, and they are colorful. There are so many species (identification is often a challenge) and lots of great behaviors to learn about and photograph. They migrate incredible distances, even the tiniest ones. Those are all the standard answers, but what matters to me is that they have gotten into my heart and into my soul. It is my passion to be out with them. I went out with a friend to DeSoto yesterday morning. I came home and processed the pictures. I said, “Oh My God. I made so many great pictures – and in only two hours. Photographing birds is a kick and I just love it.

    I have been so, so blessed. I am going to Galapagos next week for the first time. I am starting to like the international trips. I lead most of them for others and don’t make a cent. I do get to go to great places, and I strive to make the trips educational for the participants. I am returning to the Galapagos next year and will visit Antarctica for the first time in 2007.

    Added note: my trips to the Galapagos, to Antarctica, to Midway, the Wild Britain cruise that I did a few years back, my trips to Africa, to Norway, and most recently to Japan have all been among the great highlights of my life.

    I’d be glad to answer any questions below.

    March 15th, 2012

    A Favorite Situation

    This Red-crowned Crane head portrait was created at the Akan Crane Center with the with the tripod-mounted Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens, the 1.4X III TC, and the Canon EOS-1D Mark IV. ISO 400. Evaluative metering +1 2/3 stops as framed: 1/320 sec. at f/9 in Manual mode.

    Central Sensor/AI Servo Rear Focus on the bird’s bill and recompose. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to enjoy a larger, more spectacular version.

    A Favorite Situation

    This image was made moments after I created one of my very favorite images of the Japan trip, the sleeping Red-crowned Crane featured in the blog post here. In fact, this many very well be the same bird. A guy comes out on a snowmobile every ten to fifteen minutes or so to chase off the Whooper Swans that come in to eat the grain provided for the endangered cranes. Each time he shuffles the crane deck so to speak. In any case, at the time I made this image the subject was standing in the shade of the building that is the visitor center.

    Subject in shade/background in sun is one of my very favorite nature photography situations. I look for it every time I am out. If you are lucky enough to encounter the opportunity, you will-as I did hear–want to add enough light to properly expose the shaded subject while at the same time avoid over-exposing the sunlit background. As I was in Manual mode at 1/800 sec. at f/11 for the sunlit bird I first dialed up to f/9 and then rolled adjusted the shutter speed till the analog scale showed +1 2/3 stops. I made one quick image, checked the background for blinkies–there were none, and then went for a better head angle.

    One thing that we do on all IPTs is to make folks aware of the types of situations that I look for. And we let them know why one situation works while another does not. When I am in the field with a big lens I spend most of my time looking. Looking for good situations. I don’t waste my time photographing junk. When I find something good, however, I make lots of images in short order….

    This is the original capture converted with the ACR defaults. I opened NIK Color Efex Pro 4 and ran Tonal Contrast at 70% only on the bird’s dark feathers and the bill. Then I brought up the background in Viveza where I am learning to use the Control Points effectively.

    NIK 15% Discount

    You can save 15% on all NIK products (including and especially Color Efex Pro 4) by clicking here and entering BAA in the Promo Code box at check-out. Then hit Apply to see your savings. You can download a trial copy that will work for 15 days and allow you to create full sized images.

    NIK Creative Efex Collection

    NIK recently announced the availability of a special limited production bundle of 3 of their most popular products, Color Efex Pro 4, Silver Efex Pro 2, and HDR Efex Pro. You can save more than $200 on the bundle which is available only through NIK affiliates. If you would like additional info, please e-mail with the words “Creative Efex Collection” in the Subject line. If you have been on the fence about purchasing the plug-ins mentioned above this is a great chance to save some significant bucks. I love both Color Efex Pro and Silver Efex and plan on learning to use Viveza soon.

    Join me this summer and live on a boat for six full days of Coastal Brown (Grizzly) Bear photography. At close range. Live your dream. Great food too! Images copyright Arthur Morris & Robert O’Toole. If you are seriously interested please e-mail for itinerary and additional details.

    SELECTED IPT INFO

    KATMAI BEAR BOAT IPT: July 24-31, 2012 from Kodiak, AK: $6699. Limit 6/Openings 3. Coastal Brown Bears (Grizzlies) Galore!

    Coastal Brown Bears at point blank range foraging & clamming with a good chance of copulations; cubs nursing and playing. Likely additional subjects include Horned and Tufted Puffins, nesting Bald Eagle and Black-legged Kittiwake, Steller’s Sea Lion, rafts of Sea Otters and more. Halibut fishing optional

    MORRO BAY, CA IPT. APR 2-4, 2012. 3-FULL DAYS: $1499. Introductory Slide program: 7pm on 4/1. Limit: 10/Openings: 2.

    Please call or e-mail for late registration discount information.

    Click here to learn more about this IPT.

    Earn Free Contest Entries and Support both the Bulletins and the Blog by making all your B & H purchases here.

    More and more folks are earning multiple contest entries with their B & H purchases. See here for details on that. Eleven great categories, 34 winning and honored images, and prize pools valued in excess of $20,000. Click here to visit the competition home page.

    Shopper’s Guide

    Below is a list of gear that I used to create the image in this blog post. Thanks a stack to all who have used the Shopper’s Guide links to purchase their gear as a thank you for all the free information that we bring you on the Blog and in the Bulletins. Before you purchase anything be sure to check out the advice in our Shopper’s Guide.

    Canon 800mm f/5.L IS lens. Right now this is my all time favorite super-telephoto lens.
    Canon EF 1.4X III TC. This new TC is designed to work best with the new Series II super-telephoto lenses.
    Canon EOS-1D Mark IV professional digital camera body. My two Mark IVs are my workhorse digital camera bodies.

    And from the BAA On-line Store:

    LensCoats. I have a LensCoat on each of my big lenses to protect them from nicks and thus increase their re-sales value. All my big lens LensCoat stuff is in Hardwood Snow pattern.
    LegCoat Tripod Leg Covers. I have four tripods active and each has a Hardwood Snow LegCoat on it to help prevent further damage to my tender shoulders 🙂 And you will love them in mega-cold weather….
    Gitzo GT3530LS Tripod. This one will last you a lifetime.
    Mongoose M3.6 Tripod Head. Right now this is the best tripod head around for use with lenses that weigh less than 9 pounds. For heavier lenses, check out the Wimberley V2 head.
    CR-80 Replacement Foot for Canon 800. When using the 800 on a Mongoose as I do, replacing the lens foot with this accessory lets the lens sit like a dog whether pointed up or down and prevents wind-blown spinning of your lens on breezy days by centering the lens directly over the tripod.
    Double Bubble Level. You will find one in my camera’s hot shoe whenever I am not using flash.
    The Lens Align Mark II. I use the Lens Align Mark II pretty much religiously to micro-adjust all of my gear an average of once a month and always before a major trip. Enjoy our free comprehensive tutorial here.
    Canon EOS-1D Mark IV User’s Guide. Learn to use your Mark IV the way that I use mine. Also available for the 7D and the Mark III here.
    BreezeBrowser. I do not see how any digital photographer can exist without this program.

    March 14th, 2012

    Boys and Girls and Children of All Ages

    These two sea eagles–Steller’s on our left, White-tailed on our right–were photographed on the sea ice from the boat at Rausu, Hokkaido, Japan with the tripod-mounted Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens and the Canon EOS-1D Mark IV. ISO 400. Evaluative metering +1 1/3 stops off the snow: 1/2000 sec. at f/8 in Manual mode.

    Central Sensor/AI Servo Rear Focus on an eye of the White-tailed Sea-Eagle and recompose. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to enjoy a larger, more spectacular version.

    There are two important lessons that we can learn from this image:

    1. Even though I stopped down only one stop, from f.5.6 to f/8, there was sufficient depth-of-field to cover the Steller’s. Why? Because these are large birds that were a good distance from the camera. In this situation, at 36 meters, you have 14 1/2 inches of depth-of-field behind the point of focus. Contrast that with less than 1/2 inch of depth-of-field had the birds been at the minimum focus distance of 6 meters. Depth-of-field increases dramatically as subject to camera distance increases. You can learn a ton by visiting one of the many on line depth-of-field calculators. I use DOFMaster.
    2. With the larger Steller’s only a few inches behind the smaller white-tailed the birds look roughly the same size. In fact Steller’s averages about 20% larger and heavier than White-tailed with the females of both species being well larger than the males.

    BOYS AND GIRLS AND CHILDREN OF ALL AGES

    Many of you are trying to help us but are screwing up unintentionally. Please read on for the whole story….

    In July 2010, less than two years ago, BIRDS AS ART became a B&H affiliate. We asked folks to consider making their lens, camera, and photographic accessory purchases through B&H using either our main link or specific links to various products. We suggested that doing so would be a great way to thank us for the free information that we have been providing on the blog and in Bulletins for many years. And to thanks me for the hundreds of gear-related, photo-related questions that I answer personally via e-mail every year. It is my firm belief that the topics, tutorials, and information in the blog and Bulletins–all dealing with nature photography, and all free–are unmatched anywhere. I quite literally put in at least twenty hours a week on the blog, and most Bulletins, in addition, takes 8-16 hours to create.

    I will admit at times to feel overwhelmed by my desire to create new and exciting blog posts and Bulletin features on a near-daily basis, and to feeling crushed at times by the number of folks writing to request information or have their questions answered. Though I am sure that I miss an e-mail on occasion, such instances are very rare. We do ask that folks write only with new questions that have not been answered previously on the blog, in Bulletins, or in ABP, in ABP II, or in Digital Basics, and that they try a quick search before writing.

    At times I have considered going to a pay as you ask system for those wishing e-mail answers, or a shareware payment for the blog and the Bulletins–pay something if you wish–all donations accepted. But I have always resisted, preferring instead to keep everything totally free.

    Many folks have kindly used our B&H links. We thank them for the patronage and greatly appreciate the 3% that we receive from B&H. Our commissions have ranged from pennies on small accessories (21 cents on a AA battery case) to $416.97 on the purchase of a Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens for $13,899.00 less than a week ago–thanks you very much for that one! Wow, the price on that lens has gone way up. No matter the size of our commissions all BAA B&H purchases are greatly appreciated at this end. And you will simply not find better prices or more reliable service anywhere: order by 4pm for same day shipment and an easy 30-day return policy. In business since 1973 B&H is simply the world’s leading retailer of imaging products. As for those low prices, when I order an item through the Explorers of Light program I get it for 10% off low dealer price. The low dealer price is the B&H price. That should tell you something.

    Now here is what we have discovered recently: many folks, wishing to earn free entries into the BAA 1st International Bird Photography Competition, are sending us B&H receipts and asking for their free contest entries. The only problem is that they have not begun their searches with our track-able BAA/B&H affiliate link. And they have not use one of the track-able specific product links that grave most every Bulletin and blog post. Folks send us the B&H receipt that they received via e-mail. Jim checks the transaction reports and is unable to match the purchase. Then he e-mails back letting folks know of their error. Then the folks write back and say, “Sorry–my bad.”

    If you wish to thank us by making your B&H purchases via a BAA/B&H affiliate link, you can click here to ensure that your purchases are tracked to BAA.

    Or you can use this link:

    http://www.bhphotovideo.com/?BI=6633&KBID=7226

    Or you can click on any one of the B&H logo links that are found all over the web site and the blog. They look like this:

    If you have a specific product in mind, you can use one of the product specific links that can be found on the blog or in Bulletins both in our legendary educational captions or in the Shopper’s Guide features near or at the bottom of each blog post or Bulletin. Note: to check and make sure that you are using a valid BAA/B&H link hold your cursor over the link and check out the URL in the bottom left of your browser window. It should always end in 7226, our B&H affiliate code number. If you make a purchase from a link without the 7226 appendage, you are not making a BAA/B&H purchase. Not to worry: once you get to the B&H web site you will no longer see the 7226 code. The order is tracked to BAA invisibly.

    Lastly you can e-mail me and let me know which product you will be buying. I will shoot you back the correct link asap.

    Best of all, you still have two weeks to earn free entries into the contest with your major purchases. See here for payment options and here for complete details.

    Much appreciated.

    ps: If you purchase a new lens or camera body from B&H using a BAA/B&H link you can further help us out by ordering the additional stuff that you need from us at BIRDS AS ART. These items might include the right Gitzo Tripod for you, a Mongoose M3.6 or a Wimberley V2 head, LensCoats or LegCoats, camera plates or lens plates and replacement feet, flash brackets, flash cards, and lots more. Your BAA Online Store purchases are always appreciate.

    Earn Free Contest Entries and Support both the Bulletins and the Blog by making all your B & H purchases here.

    More and more folks are earning multiple contest entries with their B & H purchases. See here for details on that. Eleven great categories, 34 winning and honored images, and prize pools valued in excess of $20,000. Click here to visit the competition home page.

    Shopper’s Guide

    Below is a list of gear that I used to create the image in this blog post. Thanks a stack to all who have used the Shopper’s Guide links to purchase their gear as a thank you for all the free information that we bring you on the Blog and in the Bulletins. Before you purchase anything be sure to check out the advice in our Shopper’s Guide.

    Canon 800mm f/5.L IS lens. Right now this is my all time favorite super-telephoto lens.
    Canon EOS-1D Mark IV professional digital camera body. My two Mark IVs are my workhorse digital camera bodies.

    And from the BAA On-line Store:

    LensCoats. I have a LensCoat on each of my big lenses to protect them from nicks and thus increase their re-sales value. All my big lens LensCoat stuff is in Hardwood Snow pattern.
    LegCoat Tripod Leg Covers. I have four tripods active and each has a Hardwood Snow LegCoat on it to help prevent further damage to my tender shoulders 🙂 And you will love them in mega-cold weather….
    Gitzo GT3530LS Tripod. This one will last you a lifetime.
    Mongoose M3.6 Tripod Head. Right now this is the best tripod head around for use with lenses that weigh less than 9 pounds. For heavier lenses, check out the Wimberley V2 head.
    CR-80 Replacement Foot for Canon 800. When using the 800 on a Mongoose as I do, replacing the lens foot with this accessory lets the lens sit like a dog whether pointed up or down and prevents wind-blown spinning of your lens on breezy days by centering the lens directly over the tripod.
    Double Bubble Level. You will find one in my camera’s hot shoe whenever I am not using flash.
    The Lens Align Mark II. I use the Lens Align Mark II pretty much religiously to micro-adjust all of my gear an average of once a month and always before a major trip. Enjoy our free comprehensive tutorial here.
    Canon EOS-1D Mark IV User’s Guide. Learn to use your Mark IV the way that I use mine. Also available for the 7D and the Mark III here.
    BreezeBrowser. I do not see how any digital photographer can exist without this program.

    March 13th, 2012

    What A Way To Finish!

    This sleeping Red-crowned Crane was photographed at the Akan Crane Center with the with the tripod-mounted Canon 800mm f/5.6L IS lens, the 1.4X III TC, and the Canon EOS-1D Mark IV. ISO 400. Evaluative metering +1 stop off the snow: 1/800 sec. at f/11 in Manual mode.

    Central Sensor/AI Servo Rear Focus on the bird’s eye and recompose. Click here if you missed the Rear Focus Tutorial. Click on the image to enjoy a larger, more spectacular version.

    This image, made in sweet, late afternoon sunlight, was one of the last that I created on my incredibly wonderful trip to Japan.

    Blessed

    I worked on this blog post at 37,000 feet en route from Tokyo to Dallas’s DFW. As I sat so comfortably in my lie-flat first class seat on American Airlines flight 176, I have been thinking at length about how blessed I have been and am. Yes, blessed to be able to be sitting up front for sure, but blessed in so many other more important ways. I have been thinking about how privileged I have been to have made two amazingly wonderful trips already this year, the Southern Oceans trip with the Cheesemans’ and the Japan trip with Robert O’Toole and a small IPT group. Thinking About the wonderful weather, birds, and animals that I have enjoyed so much. About my safe travels in good health. About all the great food, the fine meals on the Ortelius and the yakatori meals and the curry dishes here in Japan. About all the great photographic opportunities that I and the folks whom I have traveled with have experienced. And about my two wonderful daughters and their wonderful husbands, about my four super grandkids, and about my 89 year-old Mom whom is waiting anxiously for my call after I clear customs in Dallas. About my relationship with Canon and about all the great folks who have joined me over the years on IPTs, and about the many who have become dear friends. Blessed by my involvement with BPN including and especially with founding partner James Shadle and all the great members and participants there. Blessed by friendships past and present with so many great photography folks: Linda Robbins, Joanne Williams, Denise Ippolito, Ellen Anon, my web-man Peter Kes, Jim Neiger, Robert Amoruso, and Robert O’Toole among others. And doctor, doctor, Cliff Oliver; had I not met him on the Bosque IPT so many years ago I it is not likely that I would still be alive. And thinking about my pool. And getting in it :).

    With apologies to the many that I have inadvertently omitted here I have to say that I have been one lucky guy.

    Sayonara Japan. It’s been great.

    My right-hand man Jim Litzenberg (another blessing) is picking me up at about 3pm in Orlando. My plan is to publish this from my car on the way home after getting online with my Droid. Lord, what amazingly wonderful times we live in. So if you see this blog post it means that I made it safely at least to MCO and should be home soon.

    So much for plans. We got into Dallas early so I am publishing this early :). Enjoy. ps: Mom is doing fine. pps: Home safely at 5:05pm but beat :).

    What A Way To Finish!

    When I saw that the beautiful bird featured in the opening image here had decided to take a nap not too far from the walkway at Akan, I about jumped out of my lined dungarees. Whatever is draped over the bird’s head adds a ton to the beauty of the image. I think that it was the bird’s far wing; if anyone knows otherwise for sure please let me know. My very first instinct was to go for the traditional super-tight head and folded neck portrait (see image-last below) with the bird’s eye placed on or very close to the upper right rule of thirds spot. But my 2X III TC was already packed for the trip home, to save time…. So I went with what I had, a maximum effective focal length of (only) 800 X 1.4 X the 1.3 crop factor of my camera: 1456 mm, or just under 30X magnification. Poor boy. I lowered my tripod to ensure as evenly-toned a distant, out of focus woods background as possible.

    Getting the right exposure was easy. With the soft, late afternoon light I took a meter reading off the sunlit snow and opened up one stop. Then I stopped down a bit to ensure sharp feather detail as I was relatively close to the minimum focusing distance of the lens, 6 meters and I made a series of images framed as you see in the original capture immediately below. I knew all the while that I would need to figure out the best possible crop while working with a somewhat awkward image design. Whatever I did, the bird’s eye would wind up somewhere near the middle of the frame. I experimented with various crops and finally decided on the one that you see above.

    If you’d like to see what others thought of the image above, check out my BPN post: Last Japan Keeper.

    This is the original full frame capture.

    How’d You Like My Crop?

    Now that you’ve seen the full frame original image (immediately above), feel free to leave a comment and let me know what you think of my original crop, the one in the lead image here.

    This is the traditional “sleeping pelican, super-tight head and folded neck composition” that I had in mind until I realized that I did not have my 2X III TC with me. If I’d had the 2X with me I would have focused in Live View with Live Mode AF as described in detail in the Mark IV User’s Guide; accurate focus is attained via contrast on the imaging sensor. The TIFF file of this more tightly cropped version still has enough pixels for the image to run large in a magazine or for at least a sharp 8 X 12″ print.

    Which Do You Like Best?

    Please take a moment to let us know which you like best, the quasi-pano crop in the opening image or the tighter 3X2 crop (immediately above). And do let us know why. If you liked the middle image best–the full frame original capture–then you need to go back to image design school and study the principles outlined in the Advanced Composition and Image Design section of ABP II.

    NIK 15% Discount

    You can save 15% on all NIK products (including and especially Color Efex Pro 4) by clicking here and entering BAA in the Promo Code box at check-out. Then hit Apply to see your savings. You can download a trial copy that will work for 15 days and allow you to create full sized images.

    NIK Creative Efex Collection

    NIK recently announced the availability of a special limited production bundle of 3 of their most popular products, Color Efex Pro 4, Silver Efex Pro 2, and HDR Efex Pro. You can save more than $200 on the bundle which is available only through NIK affiliates. If you would like additional info, please e-mail with the words “Creative Efex Collection” in the Subject line. If you have been on the fence about purchasing the plug-ins mentioned above this is a great chance to save some significant bucks. I love both Color Efex Pro and Silver Efex and plan on learning to use Viveza soon.

    Earn Free Contest Entries and Support both the Bulletins and the Blog by making all your B & H purchases here.

    More and more folks are earning multiple contest entries with their B & H purchases. See here for details on that. Eleven great categories, 34 winning and honored images, and prize pools valued in excess of $20,000. Click here to visit the competition home page.

    Shopper’s Guide

    Below is a list of gear that I used to create the image in this blog post. Thanks a stack to all who have used the Shopper’s Guide links to purchase their gear as a thank you for all the free information that we bring you on the Blog and in the Bulletins. Before you purchase anything be sure to check out the advice in our Shopper’s Guide.

    Canon 800mm f/5.L IS lens. Right now this is my all time favorite super-telephoto lens.
    Canon EF 1.4X III TC. This new TC is designed to work best with the new Series II super-telephoto lenses.
    Canon EOS-1D Mark IV professional digital camera body. My two Mark IVs are my workhorse digital camera bodies.

    And from the BAA On-line Store:

    LensCoats. I have a LensCoat on each of my big lenses to protect them from nicks and thus increase their re-sales value. All my big lens LensCoat stuff is in Hardwood Snow pattern.
    LegCoat Tripod Leg Covers. I have four tripods active and each has a Hardwood Snow LegCoat on it to help prevent further damage to my tender shoulders 🙂 And you will love them in mega-cold weather….
    Gitzo GT3530LS Tripod. This one will last you a lifetime.
    Mongoose M3.6 Tripod Head. Right now this is the best tripod head around for use with lenses that weigh less than 9 pounds. For heavier lenses, check out the Wimberley V2 head.
    CR-80 Replacement Foot for Canon 800. When using the 800 on a Mongoose as I do, replacing the lens foot with this accessory lets the lens sit like a dog whether pointed up or down and prevents wind-blown spinning of your lens on breezy days by centering the lens directly over the tripod.
    Double Bubble Level. You will find one in my camera’s hot shoe whenever I am not using flash.
    The Lens Align Mark II. I use the Lens Align Mark II pretty much religiously to micro-adjust all of my gear an average of once a month and always before a major trip. Enjoy our free comprehensive tutorial here.
    Canon EOS-1D Mark IV User’s Guide. Learn to use your Mark IV the way that I use mine. Also available for the 7D and the Mark III here.
    BreezeBrowser. I do not see how any digital photographer can exist without this program.