Mandarin Duck


Photo Information
Floating around the Isabella Plantation in Richmond Park
07/06/2009 - 17:37matwhittington
CategoryWildlife / Nature
Shutter Speed1/250
Aperturef/8
LensN/A
ISO200
Focal Length300mm
Views/Likes53/0

Rees

Link Posted 07/06/2009 - 18:43
Beautiful capture, like the reflection and composition, lovely vibrant colours - well taken.
Not everything in life is Black & White, If only it were!
Kind Regards,
Rees

PentaxBabe

Link Posted 07/06/2009 - 18:48
Very nice. Lovely colours and the reection and water colour really add to it. Well done.

Cliff-P

Link Posted 07/06/2009 - 19:22
Cant say any more than what's already been said. Excellent
Cliff.




My Flickr link
Nikon D750, D7000 , Nikkor 80-400, 70-300 and 18-200 lenses

matwhittington

Link Posted 07/06/2009 - 20:39
Thanks very much - I've taken loads of pics of the birds in Richmond Park (when they stay still long enough!!) - but this is one of my faves so far...
Mat W

My Flickr: link

paullucas

Link Posted 08/06/2009 - 00:27
Agree with the above, but have only one niggle.
Have you lightened the image up? I only say that as there is no detail in the white of the face, and the whole picture looks slightly lighter than it should. Just an observation.

Oh and this technically is the 3rd thing but does your sensor need cleaning as there is a small black spec below the beak.

Paul

Rees

Link Posted 08/06/2009 - 17:51
Your right Paul, sensor spot. must need some glasses.
Not everything in life is Black & White, If only it were!
Kind Regards,
Rees
Last Edited by Rees on 08/06/2009 - 17:51

matwhittington

Link Posted 08/06/2009 - 18:23
Thanks for the comments - the pic is pretty much as shot, just a slight crop (maybe I'll have a bit of a play with it in Photoshop...). Good spot on the sensor spot though - obviously time for a bit of judicious cleaning...
Mat W

My Flickr: link

Rees

Link Posted 08/06/2009 - 18:46
matwhittington wrote:
Thanks for the comments - the pic is pretty much as shot, just a slight crop (maybe I'll have a bit of a play with it in Photoshop...). Good spot on the sensor spot though - obviously time for a bit of judicious cleaning...

If you have Photoshop/Elements and you spot a sensor dust spot on your image, just use the "Spot Healing Brush Tool" from the Tool Box to remove it, without spoiling the overall appearance of your image.
Not everything in life is Black & White, If only it were!
Kind Regards,
Rees


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