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Rob Brewer posted in the group Black and White Photography
Took these recently in Studio – Playing with different modifiers and lighting options – Was lots of fun
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Jako Poolman posted in the group Street Photography
Welcome to Mars! Played around with a red filter, and love these semi-post-apocalyptic images. Shot with a Canon R8, RF35mm with a red filter.
– “Mr Pet” EXIF: 1/125, 100, 5.6
– “Creeping Sun” EXIF: 1/800, 400, 5.6 -
Ray Jeong posted in the group Photo Gear Talk
Watch as full-frame wanderlust meets every ‘jack-of-all-lenses’ hero! If one lens could do it all, this video asks: Can it actually? 📸😄
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Ray Jeong posted in the group Photo Gear Talk
Check out this review of the Canon R6 Mark III — it’s basically the camera equivalent of “What CAN’T I do?” (Spoiler: only leaving your wallet alone).
Perfect for photographers who want big features and a small ego-boost. -
Ray Jeong posted in the group Photo Gear Talk
Watch how the Canon RF 45 mm f/1.2 might just upstage your favourite lens — yea, even yours.
Prepare for serious aperture jealousy (and maybe lens-bag envy 😏 -
Ray Jeong posted in the group Photo Gear Talk
Check out the review of the Sigma 20-200mm — the travel zoom that daringly asks, ‘Why stick to one focal length when you can have 10?’
📸 Plus: yes, the size is real — your gym membership may thank you. -
Bruna Mentrup posted in the group Wildlife Photography
A wildlife photography checklist is important for ensuring readiness and ethical practices, allowing photographers to focus on capturing fleeting moments rather than worrying about forgotten details. The dynamic and unpredictable nature of wildlife means that every second counts, and a pre-shoot checklist helps.
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Renate Laaks posted in the group Wildlife Photography
Kurrichane Thrush in Mulberry tree
Settings: focal length 560mm, f8, 1/1000, ISO1600
Gear: Canon 5D Mark IV, EF 100-400mm with 1.4x extender -
Landie Fourie posted in the group Wildlife Photography
Beware the old soldier.
Nikon D610
Tamron 150-600 at 600mm
f/8
1/2500sec
ISO 2200 +2step exposure compensation
Beanbag support-
It is such a lovely portrait of a Buffalo. The exposure is spot-on and the image is very sharp. The idea of darkening the background worked very well, and it adds impact. A suggestion to improve your beautiful composition would be to make the white border a lot smaller, as the thick white border distracts from your image. Well done!
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About Me

Bruno Verolini
Business & Management Consultant and Aspiring Photographer
My heritage is my upbringing with a strong foundation of honesty and integrity, and blessed by good health. Art, culture, design and classical music together with a love for food, sport and nature is what defines my existence.
My daughter is my North Star.
A strong value system guides me and like most, certain elements of one's life become the cornerstone of the person one is.
I am a visualizer and strategist with an acute business acumen.
Creative talent and artistic ability has my profound respect that is inspirational.
Authenticity is what I stand for - it gives space to be imperfect, flawed and who you are.
Photography is my healing with perfection my desire.
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Friends
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@kerstingh
Johann van den Bergh
@jhvdbergh
Riette Jonker
@riettejonker
Itumeleng Hlalethoa
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Lezindie Stears
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It is such a beautiful image of the Karoo-Thrush, Renate! The exposure is spot-on, and the berries in the tree add so much interest. The background is blurred out nicely and therefore does not compete with your subject. Your image is sharp with good catchlight in the eye. For the club, crop a little more from the top to place your subject in a…Read More