Canadian Geographic Photo Club - Alberta Provincial/National Parks
  




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Sheri Rypstra commented on "" 2015-09-14 8:22pm

Thanks again Jocelyn!

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Sheri Rypstra commented on "" 2015-09-14 8:20pm

Thank you Jocelyn!

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JocelynGalipeau commented on "" 2015-09-14 7:22pm

Great photo..!

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JocelynGalipeau commented on "" 2015-09-14 7:20pm

Nice shot!

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JocelynGalipeau commented on "" 2015-09-14 7:14pm

Nice image..!

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Larry Erlendson commented on "" 2015-09-14 3:00am

I like the perspective, quite a dramatic shot... nice work Yvan. Nice to see you uploading photos again.

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Sheri Rypstra commented on "" 2015-09-13 5:48pm

OK! I didn't know about that relationship between purposefully underexposing and shutter speed. Though I suspected something like that, I had not watched to see if that would be true. Thank you!

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Larry Erlendson commented on "" 2015-09-13 5:15pm

Sheri, another thing you can do is underexpose a stop. That is because info in the shadows can be brought out in post processing. That can double your shutter speed.

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Sheri Rypstra commented on "" 2015-09-13 4:22pm

Larry, rest assured, I was not worried about doing anything 'wrong', but was just hoping to eek out a little bit more shutter speed. I find this picture so close to 'ideal', but the bird a tad 'uncrisp'. I understand what you are saying...it is what I usually do. I had a monopod, and was bracing against a railing...which worked until my youngest started to climb it! Thank you for confirming I'm on the right track.

Dave, thank you for your comments. I don't think I realized that that rule of thumb was for a hand held camera...I'll have to review my notes again. A tripod may be the missing factor... Good idea about trying some flash shots at the stream without a subject. I have added flash, when taking some shots of the European Wall Lizard, a skittish subject, and amazingly enough they seem to tolerate the light.

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Dave McLean commented on "" 2015-09-13 2:05pm

Sheri, I like this shot. Very nicely composed. The one over focal length rule is talking about the slowest shutter speed to use when hand-holding the camera. No need to use it when you use a mono- or tripod. 95% of the time I shoot aperture priority because I like to control DOF and I use my mono-pod most of the time with my 600mm lens and use my tripod in low light situations. You should experiment with flash when there's nothing there that you want to scare away to see how flash affects the water. I've never used flash for skittish subjects.

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