Wildlife Photography on the Internet
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Underwater & Wildlife Photography
Travel Photographer Matt Considine focuses on wildlife and underwater photography and also landscapes nature adventure with images of Asia Africa and the Pacific and a stock library and selected Fine Art Prints.
Underwater & Wildlife Photography
Underwater & Wildlife Photography
- Flutterby
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Wildlife Photography on the Internet
Finalists of the 2014 Wildlfe Photographer of the Year
Stunning pics...worth a look!
http://news.distractify.com/culture/wil ... -year/?v=1
Stunning pics...worth a look!
http://news.distractify.com/culture/wil ... -year/?v=1
Re: Finalists of the 2014 Wildlfe Photographer of the Year
Some are .others are
http://prwinnan.wix.com/prwinnan-photography
- harrys
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Re: Finalists of the 2014 Wildlfe Photographer of the Year
I agree with you PRWIN some really great ones and some......well not so good
KNP: May be one day again??
- Mel
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Re: Finalists of the 2014 Wildlfe Photographer of the Year
Blatant lie - there are no red kangaroos
At least not for me.
At least not for me.
God put me on earth to accomplish a certain amount of things. Right now I'm so far behind that I'll never die.
- nan
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Re: Finalists of the 2014 Wildlfe Photographer of the Year
some very superb (with very good idea, like Barracuda/Rhino/Monkey...)
some a bit too "modern"... for me
and some very nice "conventional"
but in all there is a research and that is a good work
some a bit too "modern"... for me
and some very nice "conventional"
but in all there is a research and that is a good work
Kgalagadi lover… for ever
https://safrounet.piwigo.com/
https://safrounet.piwigo.com/
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Re: Finalists of the 2014 Wildlfe Photographer of the Year
Hmm..very interesting. So many "photographic rules" have been broken yet the photos have got through to the finals. But that is what the photographers say..Learn the Rules then break them....:)
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A lion cub and the supermoon eclipse
A lion cub and the supermoon eclipse
I am currently in South Luangwa National Park in Zambia and I found out that I was going to be here during the “supermoon” total lunar eclipse. This would be the only opportunity to photograph such an occurrence for 18 years – so I immediately set about planning how I could take a photograph of this phenomenon with an African twist.
I obtained permission from the Zambian Wildlife Authority to work in the national park at night and at 2.45am on the night of the supermoon I set out in search of subjects. I had a number of potential shots planned but I knew I would need to remain flexible as I couldn’t control the opportunities that would present themselves.
I first went to where I had seen lions the evening before. On arrival, the lions had gone but I could hear their faint roars in the distance. I followed the sound through the African night and eventually found the lions just as the eclipse was starting.
There was only one tool that would allow me to frame the lions with the eclipse behind, and that was my trusty BeetleCam!
I was after a shot of a lion under the blood moon, but this was going to be a challenging shot to achieve for so many reasons. Balancing the foreground brightness with the dim red moon was an exercise requiring some guesswork and good estimation skills, as I was trying to compose the shot in the pitch darkness. Not to forget that I had to do this while trying to avoid the pride of lions running off with my BeetleCam! However, I persevered and, shortly before the moon set, this is the shot I managed to get…
A lion cub with the supermoon eclipse behind. Taken with a Canon EOS 5D mk III and 17-40mm f/4 lens on a BeetleCam. f/13, 8 seconds, ISO 3200. Off-camera flash triggered with Camtraptions Wireless Trigger. Plus approximately a month of planning and a spot of luck. -
I am currently in South Luangwa National Park in Zambia and I found out that I was going to be here during the “supermoon” total lunar eclipse. This would be the only opportunity to photograph such an occurrence for 18 years – so I immediately set about planning how I could take a photograph of this phenomenon with an African twist.
I obtained permission from the Zambian Wildlife Authority to work in the national park at night and at 2.45am on the night of the supermoon I set out in search of subjects. I had a number of potential shots planned but I knew I would need to remain flexible as I couldn’t control the opportunities that would present themselves.
I first went to where I had seen lions the evening before. On arrival, the lions had gone but I could hear their faint roars in the distance. I followed the sound through the African night and eventually found the lions just as the eclipse was starting.
There was only one tool that would allow me to frame the lions with the eclipse behind, and that was my trusty BeetleCam!
I was after a shot of a lion under the blood moon, but this was going to be a challenging shot to achieve for so many reasons. Balancing the foreground brightness with the dim red moon was an exercise requiring some guesswork and good estimation skills, as I was trying to compose the shot in the pitch darkness. Not to forget that I had to do this while trying to avoid the pride of lions running off with my BeetleCam! However, I persevered and, shortly before the moon set, this is the shot I managed to get…
A lion cub with the supermoon eclipse behind. Taken with a Canon EOS 5D mk III and 17-40mm f/4 lens on a BeetleCam. f/13, 8 seconds, ISO 3200. Off-camera flash triggered with Camtraptions Wireless Trigger. Plus approximately a month of planning and a spot of luck. -
"Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world." Nelson Mandela
The desire for equality must never exceed the demands of knowledge
The desire for equality must never exceed the demands of knowledge