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Mohamed Bakr
{K:1934} 6/24/2007
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thnx mira u have also nice photo with wildlief ;-) succes...M.bakr
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Shaimaa ElWassimy
{K:1988} 5/13/2007
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I like this shot so much. Very nice look. Good work :)
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Sylvia Marriott
{K:12812} 3/4/2007
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Hi Mira, Maybe an unnoticed shaft of sunlight just caught your lens. Very annoying not to know what it is! Sylvia
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mira adel
{K:715} 3/4/2007
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hi Sylvia thanks for your comment well dear it was not through glass but it was in a cage a very silly one see the attached pic behind the birds this is the kind of cage i'm taking my pictures through
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Sylvia Marriott
{K:12812} 3/3/2007
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Hi Mira, I like the picture very much indeed but I see that there is a distinct line across the photo, did you by any chance take the picture through glass? I have taken photos through glass that have this sort of hazy look about them.Could it perhaps have been a shaft of sunlight? Anyway great job! Sylvia
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Riham Essam
{K:4931} 3/3/2007
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:) what a rare shot mira , well done my dear ..:)
Best Regards, Riham Essam
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Paul Schofield
{K:5970} 3/3/2007
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I think there is a better quality image in here. I think a few minutes working on this will improve it. For the image below, I imported your image into PS, slightly changed the curves to a shallow s and then carried out some crude burning. It took me about 2 minutes. If I spent longer then it would be better still. As for the shutter / aperture relationship, if you raise one, then the other is lowered to achieve perfect exposure. Fast shutter is good in that you do not get camera shake, and you can freeze movement, however the depth of field is limited. Slow shutter means you get good depth of field, but your image can suffer from camera shake or movement is caught as a blur. The ideal is to find a compromise. If you would like to discuss this or you are still having trouble then please feel free to reply in this thread (I will return to the image in a day or so) and I may be able to help a little more. All the very best.
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Riny Koopman
{K:102911} 3/3/2007
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Hi Mira,If your camera has a spot meter, use it for photographing birds. Spot metering offers a more precise metering configuration than other types of metering modes as it concentrates on a limited area on the subject!! Keep shooting..riny
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mira adel
{K:715} 3/3/2007
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Thanks riny for your comment but I have a problem Maybe you can help The F is 8 or 2.2 when I adjust the shutter to be 1/1500 I face this problem all the time (underexposure) knowing that the iso is 300 How can I overcome this????
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Riny Koopman
{K:102911} 3/3/2007
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Better light could make this photo better, 5/6
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