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URGENT POSSE NEWS/ROBERT O'TOOLE
GALAPAGOS 2011 PHOTO-CRUISE OF A LIFETIME
I first met Peter Kes late last winter when he traveled from his home in Switzerland to attend the SF FLA President's Week IPT. He and the rest of us had a great time and Peter and I quickly became friends. Peter is a high level/high tech computer consultant by trade. When I asked for help with my Word Press blog he graciously offered his services. With my busy travel schedule it took us a while to get Skyping but yesterday the new look blog went live. I gotta say that Peter did an amazing job; the blog looks great, is easy on the eyes, and is easy to navigate. Thank you Peter for your help. If you need setting up a website, setting up Word Press, or securing or organizing your blog, you can contact Peter by e-mail at kpkes@yahoo.com or visit him at http://www.naturenotions.ch/blog-service. While you are there, be sure to click on some of the African links and check out his blog and his images many of which are quite good.
One of my favorite features of the new blog is the rotating 1000 x 160 pixel image that graces each page. The images switch as you navigate from page to page. There are ten now but I plan on adding lots more. When Peter asked me to send him ten 1000 x 160 pixel JPEGs my first thought was, "I don't have any images that would work with that format." In short order I was having way too much fun. Once you get an idea of the concept creating artistic slices like this can be a great way to improve your compositional skills and your eye.
A very few comments from the last month were unavoidably lost during the process of switching from the old blog to the new blog. Apologies to anyone who was affected. Feel free to repost and I will respond. (I love hearing Peter say the word "comments." We say, KAH-mentz. Europeans say kuh-MENTZ. <smile>)
When you visit the blog (the address is the same: www.BIRDSASART-Blog.com ) to check out the new look, be sure to subscribe to e-mail notifications by clicking on "Subscribe to the blog" at the right side of the yellow bar. Or, you can also subscribe right now by clicking here: http://www.birdsasart-blog.com/subscribe-to-the-blog/.
LEVELING TIP FOR HAND HOLDING
IPT veteran Ardith Bondi of New York sent me this image via e-mail:
Note the 70-200 f/4 in my hands, the albino Laysan Albatross chick by the flag, and the terribly skewed horizon line. IAC, the image brought back fond memories of the great Midway trip.
I sent this via e-mail to Ardith: Hey, May I use this image to teach a lesson about leveling the camera when handholding in tomorrow's Bulletin? Please? artie
She replied: Sure, what's the lesson? Ardith
I responded: Use the top of (or in some cases, the bottom) of your camera's viewfinder box as a reference for leveling the horizon when handholding. For this image, you would point the camera down a bit until the top of the viewfinder box was lined up with and level to the top of the road. Then, after carefully raising the camera while keeping it square to the world, make the image. In these cases using One-Shot AF with Canon or S with Nikon is the way to go and makes your life easier. artie
Ardith replied: Oh, OK. What is level in that photo is a tough call. I'm looking forward to seeing what you have to say.
Needless to say, I disagreed with the "tough call" comment <smile> I wrote back: I used the Ruler Tool to level the line of the road near the top of the frame. Then I hit Rotate/Arbitrary and it showed that it needed about 4 1/2 degrees of CW rotation. Like this:
I did level her credit line by using a Quick Mask <smile>
She wrote: I did that with a number of my pictures, but not with that one. You're right, that was the horizon, and I will fix it. Thanks, Ardith
I answered: Ah, recognition! The problem is that when we are off even 2 degrees we create big problems for ourselves when we rotate the image, often losing valuable portions along the edges of the image. The lesson on how to get it right in the field without a bubble will be in tomorrow's Bulletin. later and love, artie
Here is the complete lesson: determine the correct exposure, set it manually, line up and level the horizon line in your image with the top or the bottom of the viewfinder box, then raise or lower the camera carefully as needed and push the shutter button. If you have a bubble level on hand the trick is to set the image up as above and then take a peek at the bubble and adjust as needed by rotating the camera slightly and re-checking the bubble. Best of all of course is to be on a tripod with a bubble level but for most "grab" or "B-roll" images few folks--including me--will take the extra time. Do note, however, that when it comes to the proper exposure and a pleasing image design that I put as much care into creating them as I do for my natural history images. I just like the convenience of hand-holding <smile>
You can purchase a Double-Bubble Level (aka Kaiser Duplex Spirit Level) here: https://store.birdsasart.com/shop/category.aspx?catid=9
You can learn the how to create the following keyboard shortcuts: R for the Ruler Tool and Control/? for Image Rotate Canvas (as taught to me by Robert O'Toole) plus the complete BIRDS AS ART Workflow plus tons of other great Photoshop tips in the Digital Basics File (PDF): https://store.birdsasart.com/shop/category.aspx?catid=32
One picture is worth a thousand words:
Had Ardith pointed her camera down so that the top of the viewfinder was even with and level to the road (as seen above) and then carefully raised the camera while keeping it level, she would have made her post-processing life a lot easier <smile> I have taught this lesson dozens of times on IPTs; this the first time that I have published it.
Thanks to Ardith for the image and for being a good sport. You can see a gallery of her Midway images here: http://ardithbondi.com/page75.html. She has a great canary image!
ALAN MURPHY’S "Guide to Songbird Set-up Photography"
Artie, I just finished Alan’s e-book Songbird Photography Set-up Guide. It is so good!!!!! I don’t know of anything similar or even remotely as good as Alan’s e-book when it comes to creating set-ups for passerines. I will be trying lot of his stuff during spring and summer! Thanks for your role in producing it. Markus Jais
Alan's CD book is lavishly illustrated not only with Alan’s killer images but with dozens and dozens of step-by-step photos that will show you exactly how to create your own successful set-ups. The writing is clear and concise and the directions are easy to follow and inclusive. As Alan shows in the book, even if you have only a small backyard, or even just a patio or a balcony, you can learn to create stunning avian images on a consistent basis. Get yourself a copy and you will learn the tips and tricks that Alan has been using to create exquisite images of songbirds on beautiful perches for nearly a decade.
This professionally designed, packaged, and burned CD sells for $50 plus $3.00 shipping and handling to US addresses. Shipping to Canada is $6.00. It is $8.00 for all foreign orders. Florida residents will need to add 7% sales tax ($3.50) on the cost of the CD only. You can send us a PayPal, call us at 863-692-0906 with a credit card in hand, or order the SSUPG from the BAA On-line Store (with secure credit card data transmission) by clicking here: https://store.birdsasart.com/shop/item.aspx?itemid=275. (Note: The shipping charges on BAA On-line Store orders will likely vary by small amounts from those noted above.)
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Sales price |
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Configurable - HP EliteBook 8740w Mobile Workstation Quad
Core |
1 |
$4,247.00 |
$4,247.00 |
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9x5 Next Business Day On-Site Coverage for Notebooks with Accidental Damage Protection Service, 3 years |
1 |
$99.00 |
$99.00 |
Subtotal: |
$4,346.00 |
1(Estimated) Tax: |
$305.98 |
(Fed Ex 2-Day) Shipping and handling: |
$25.20 |
Grand total: |
$4,677.18 |
I just love photographing in the rain. I replaced the eye of this bird with the eye of the same bird from the previous frame as this was the best wing position but the bird had its nictitating membrane down. For some great spoonbill photography and lots more you can contact James by phone at 813-363-2854 or e-mail: james@wildflorida.net. Phone is best. Learn more at www.wildflorida.net and www.inthefieldworkshops.com.
URGENT POSSE NEWS/ROBERT O'TOOLEGALAPAGOS 2011 PHOTO-CRUISE OF A LIFETIME IPT
2011 Galapagos Photo Cruise of a Lifetime IPT/The Complete Galapagos Photographic Experience: July 3-20, 2011 (July 5-19, 2011 on the boat): 13 1/2 days of photography plus a last morning panga ride: $12, 499. (Limit 11/Openings 2)
This two-week trip features an unparalleled photographic itinerary that will visit all the great spots in the islands; we will not miss a thing. The highlights include Tower Island—tons of nesting birds at knee and eye level, Punta Espinoza (Flightless Cormorants), Puerto Ayora (tortoises in their natural habitats), Hood Island (Waved Albatross and lots more nesting birds), South Plaza, and North Seymour. Each of these locations is on a par with Antarctica or East Africa when it comes to spectacular photographic opportunities. If you make only a one week cruise you will miss half of these great locations. With two full weeks we will enjoy a relaxed pace with shorter navigations and lots of time for snorkeling, image sharing, and small group Photoshop instruction. You will have a great photographic leader (that would be me) with 7 years of Galapagos experience teamed with the very best most knowledgeable guide in the entire archipelago. We will be the first boat on each island in the morning and the last boat to leave each island every afternoon. If we are blessed with overcast weather, we often spend as much as six hours on a landing. Jeez, I almost forgot our spectacular and romantic motor sailing ship, the Beagle: www.thebeagle.com.ec
The group will be flying to Quito on their own to arrive on July 3, 2011. We have a travel insurance day on July 4th (with an optional trip for perched hummingbirds at Tandayapa). On the morning of July 5 we fly to the Galapagos and board the boat around midday. We leave the boat two weeks later on morning of July 19 after our last photo session, a short panga ride. We fly back to Quito on that same day, July 19, overnight in Quito, and fly home on the morning of July 20.
Note: some of the walks are strenuous. Though I will be bringing my 800 f/5.6L IS lens along, I used it only rarely last year; great images are possible on all landings with a hand held 70-200mm lens.
Please e-mail me at birdsasart@att.net for the complete 2010 itinerary. The 2011 itinerary will include all of the A-list landings but may be tweaked a bit beyond that.
Happy campers only <smile> As of this moment, I have room for only three more folks and am in need of one single male roommate for a male participant. If a roommate-less woman wishes to sign up her reservation would be dependent upon my finding a single female roommate for her (unless they are open-minded). And the same will be true for the guys traveling on their own once a single male signs up. At this point I do have room for one couple. Note: there are no queen or double beds on the Beagle. Each double cabin has a larger lower bed and a smaller upper one. If worse comes to worse it will come down to a coin flip <smile> as to which roommate gets which bunk. Sleeping on the upper deck is an option in fair weather. I have done it and it was a mega-experience.
The cost of the 2011 trip is $12, 499. The price increase (from the 2010 trip) is due to a 12% increase in the cost of leasing the boat but still represents a tremendous value as compared to the cost of two week long trips. The last one week trip that I ran worked out to $1272.55 per day of photography. None-the-less, all 13 of the photographer clients were beyond thrilled with the trip. The 2011 trip will represent an incredible value at $909.01 per day of photography.
Included: three nights in the luxury hotel--the Hilton Quito Colon, round trip airfare to and from the Galapagos, all meals on the boat, a killer buffet lunch with the tortoises!, all park fees and related costs, all transfers, and a five star thank you dinner on our last evening in Quito.
Not included. Your round trip airfare from your home to and from Quito, beverages, phone calls, and the $500/person tip for the guide and the crew.
A $5,000 non-refundable deposit per person is due immediately. Please call me at 863-692-0906 or 863-221-2372 before sending your deposit to check availability.
Please print, sign, and return these two forms along with your deposit checks: http://www.birdsasart.com/Registration%20and%20Release%20Forms.pdf
Two additional non-refundable payments will be due as follows: $4000 due on NOV 1, 2010. Final payment: $3,499 will be due on FEB 1, 2011. We will be glad to take $20 off per person on the final payment if you register with a friend or with your spouse or life partner. Travel insurance is of course beyond highly recommended as none of your payments are refundable. You need to protect yourself in case of an unexpected illness or accident or other unforeseen developments.