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Luke Brouwers posted in the group Wildlife Photography
Luke Brouwers “Zebras” Etosha Pan, Namibia 2022
CANON90D 1/20sec@f32, ISO100 150mm(EF100-400)
I am not a big wildlife photographer like Bruna, whose work I absolutely love but when you get given an oppurtunity do not let it pass. This is a bit of ICM to create this effect
#WildlifePhotography #Convervation #LukeBrouwersPhotography -
Luke Brouwers posted in the group Street Photography
Luke Brouwers “Yesteryear” Pretoria 2015
CANON 70D 1/160sec@f/11 ISO100, 10-20mm Sigma
This is a bracketed exposure and then edited in Photomatix to give it that HDR effect( Still one of my favourite effects). Those of you who know Pretoria will recognize it as the old drive in on top of the Menlyn Shopping centre.
#StreetPhotography #LukeBr…Read More -
DPC posted in the group Portrait Photography
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Luke Brouwers posted in the group Street Photography
“Norwood Falls”
Luke Brouwers, Johannesburg, Norwood 2025
CANON90D. 1/4000sec@f/6.3,ISO400, 315mm with 100-400 Lens
Image from a recent walk with Danie and some students from DPC in Norwood. When I saw this image I immediately thought of waterfalls. Three images stitched together into panorama and then edited in Photoshop. -
DPC posted in the group Daily Photo Digest
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Hennie Muller posted in the group Wildlife Photography
Title: Sibling rivalry
Camera: Nikon Z6II
Lens: Sigma 150-600mm at 200mm focal length
Aperture: f/5.6
ISO: 280 Auto ISO (Yes, I know I shouldn’t have)
Shutter speed: 1/2000sec
Cropped, darkened the background a bit and sharpened with Nik 7 Sharpener Output.
#WildlifePhotography
#BirdPhotographyQuestion: Would the Auto ISO I used…Read More
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Hennie Muller posted in the group Wildlife Photography
Title: After the rain
Camera: Nikon Z6II
Lens: Sigma 150-600mm at 300mm focal length
Aperture: f/7.1
ISO: 500
Shutter speed: 1/1600sec
Cropped.
#WildlifePhotography
#BirdPhotography3 Comments-
Well done, Hennie. Your image is sharp, and you handled the exposure perfectly. You have captured the mood and drama for impact. You mentioned that you had cropped the picture; consider leaving a little more space at the bottom of your frame, as it feels slightly tight and crop somewhat more to the right for a better balance. Well done Hennie!!
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Hi Bruna, does this look better ? That black line all along the bottom of the branch was very distracting to me; I tried fixing it using brush masks, but no matter what I did I could not make it look natural, so I gave up and went for the tight crop instead.
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This looks much better with a little more space to contain the subject in the frame. The branch is an anchor point for the bird to rest on. That is why it is important to include that as well. Without the branch, the subject seems to fall out of the frame, and the composition feels unbalanced to the viewer.
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Hennie Muller posted in the group Wildlife Photography
Title: Look! A camera!
Camera: Nikon Z6II
Lens: Sigma 150-600mm at 300mm focal length
Aperture: f/7.1
ISO: 650
Shutter speed: 1/500sec
Cropped. Linear gradient to darken the foreground, and background.
#WildlifePhotography2 Comments-
Thank you for posting, Hennie; your exposure is spot-on, and your image is sharp, clean and well-presented. That is the result when your in-camera settings are spot on. Well done, Hennie! To improve your composition, consider leaving a little more imaginary space to compensate for the horse’s legs at the bottom of the frame and a little less…Read More
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DPC posted in the group Artificial Lighting
So many photographers are switching to constant lighting, and Leon Johnson gives us a taste, shooting Aphrodite for this stunning fine art portrait project.
#LeonJohnson #ContinuousLighting #StudioLighting #PortraitPhotography #FineArtPortraiture #StellaPro
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Thank you for posting Luke. Nice to see that you are exploring slow shutter speed for an creative look and feel. Just remember, the background plays a huge roll in creative blur. Next time , try a lower angle to eliminate the background and fill your frame with the Zebra’s instead. Don’t stop trying as it is very rewarding when you get it perfect.