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#1 (permalink) | |
Nae wains, Great Danes.
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Where how means why.
Posts: 3,621
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I've heard excellent things about that camera, you lucky bastard
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#2 (permalink) | |
Quiet Man in the Corner
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Pocono Mountains
Posts: 2,480
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#3 (permalink) | |
Music Addict
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Spain
Posts: 824
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![]() So now I can take better pictures of architectural details or birds. For instance, magpies. They look very beautiful to me. I love to photograph them: ![]() ![]() They say European Magpies are one of the most intelligent of all animals (in fact, they pass the mirror test). This one looks like a smart bird, indeed: ![]() ![]() It's difficult to photograph them in flight. This is my best attempt so far: ![]()
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"Lullabies for adults / crossed by the years / carry the flower of disappointment / tattooed in their gloomy melodies."
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#4 (permalink) | |||
Facilitator
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Where people kill 30 million pigs per year
Posts: 2,014
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I like how you combine your artistic eye and artistic hand(s) to photograph them, Zaqarbal. ![]() I especially like your use of the in-focus/out-of-focus metal fence as the backdrop for magpie #1, because both the fence and bird have contrasting black and white. I notice, too, that the smudges of blue in the gray road pick up the shimmery blue of some of the bird's darker feathers. I also like the moment you captured, because you can really see from the photo that this particular bird is looking somewhere and paying careful attention to something that interests her or him, just like you were paying attention to the bird. I can imagine that photographing a flying subject would be difficult. I didn't realize until seeing your final photo that magpies' wings have such a striking black/white pattern, since my only memories of magpies are indistinct ones from Europe years ago. While reading more about magpies today on Wikipedia, I learned about other signs of their intelligence besides passing the mirror test: "In captivity magpies have been observed counting up to get food, imitating human voices, and regularly using tools to clean their own cages. In the wild, they organise themselves into gangs, and use complex strategies when hunting other birds, and when confronted by predators. They cut up their food in correctly sized proportions, depending on the size of their young." I also learned that magpie pairs are monogamous, and "remain together for the duration of their lives." Neat birds. ![]() Quote:
I love the purple-blue coloration of the buildings against the pale blue sky, and the way you arranged the shot so that the buildings fit close together like jagged puzzle pieces and appear to lean in toward each other as if in conversation. The composition is pleasing, too, with much of the upper diagonal devoted to the larger building, balanced by the other three to the right. Very nice.
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Last edited by VEGANGELICA; 09-29-2012 at 11:35 AM. |
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#5 (permalink) | ||
Music Addict
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Spain
Posts: 824
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Yep. In fact, two months ago I took the following picture, where we can see their aristocratic bearing: ![]() ![]() ------------------------------------ Apart from that, yesterday I photographed a (male) blackbird: ![]() ![]() There are several blackbirds where I live, and sometimes I hear them singing (like this) early in the morning. Excellent! I think Sugimoto would like them.
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"Lullabies for adults / crossed by the years / carry the flower of disappointment / tattooed in their gloomy melodies."
Last edited by Zaqarbal; 10-03-2012 at 03:20 AM. |
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#6 (permalink) | |||
Facilitator
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Where people kill 30 million pigs per year
Posts: 2,014
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Corfe, your sea-blends-with-foggy-sky photo *does* look like Sugimoto's "Sea of Japan." Both are very nice. My favorite photo of yours, though, is the beach scene above.
The sand and the piles of twigs that have washed ashore, being in focus, remind me of how so many physical, sensory details are close to you when at the beach, inviting inspection, while the amazing expanse of water stretches to unseen distances. Your photo captures that contrast well. Quote:
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Their birdsong is very relaxing, sometimes sounding like a question and at other times like an answer. A lovely sound to hear in the morning. A couple days ago I was looking at a record I used to enjoy playing as a preschooler, when I read the lyrics for one of the songs...and they immediately made me think of you and your blackbirds: The Ash Grove - lyrics for a Welsh folk song "Down yonder green valleys where streamlets meander, when twilight is fading I pensively rove, or at the bright noontide in solitude wander amid the dark shades of the lonely ash grove. 'Tis there where the blackbird is cheerfully singing, each warbler enchants with his notes from the tree; ah, then little think I of sorrow or sadness. The ash grove entrancing spells beauty for me." And below is the tune. I have felt as if I've always known it but never realized why until two days ago when I saw the song on one of my favorite records from childhood..."Walt Disney presents It's a Small World: 18 Favorite Folk Songs." The Ash Grove - tune The Ashgrove - YouTube About bird song: I wanted to think of a distinctive bird song that I could give to you in return for the blackbirds. Finally I remembered that I hear great horned owls hooting in the evening sometimes. I love the sound of their distant hooo-hooo-hoo-hooooos: Great horned owl hooting - YouTube I don't have a picture of a great horned owl ![]() ![]()
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Last edited by VEGANGELICA; 10-07-2012 at 12:04 AM. |
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#7 (permalink) | |
Blue Pill Oww
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Luimneach, Eire
Posts: 1,107
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Beautiful!
Morocco ![]() ![]() ![]()
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https://www.instagram.com/hennas.lullaby/ |
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#9 (permalink) |
The Music Guru.
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Beyond the Wall
Posts: 4,858
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Here's some pictures that I took from the CN Tower in Toronto a couple of weeks ago (yeah, I do all the touristy shit in my own city).
View of the Harbourfront and a marina from the very bottom level. ![]() Looking through the glass floor. The whole floor is actually glass, but shortly after the tower opened they had to cover most of it with carpet so people wouldn't shit their pants once they stepped off the elevator. ![]() Another look through the glass floor. ![]() View of the Toronto Island Airport. Mostly used for private and commercial flights, also used by the fighter jets at the summer airshow. ![]() The Rogers Centre (Sky Dome) and surrounding condos. Condos are popping up everywhere, it seems. ![]() Looking West. ![]() The downtown core. ![]() ![]() |
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#10 (permalink) |
The Music Guru.
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Beyond the Wall
Posts: 4,858
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Some more recent photos:
The CN Tower. ![]() Looking towards the sky in the Financial District. This one is by far my favourite photo I've ever taken. I'm quite proud of it! ![]() Financial District office buildings, with the CN Tower in the distant background. ![]() The Hard Rock Cafe at Yonge & Dundas. I don't think this one really turned out great with the sepia tone though. ![]() |
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