Outdoor Ontario
Photography => Ontario Birds => Topic started by: Shortsighted on June 10, 2024, 04:06:58 PM
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Nice overcast light also makes a high-contrast kingbird look better, although the cranked-up ISO needed to compensate when using a Dx sensor is the penalty. The first shot was taken when it was so dismal that I put the headlights "on" while driving. I would love to see what its like to shoot at ISO 4000 and still see a clean image, even after cropping.
(https://photos.smugmug.com/Outdoor-Ontario/Outdoor-Ontario/i-Hh7NmWj/0/Dfvn6NkVZ5kNsSNSV6ZvVSB2wg6mWJHRhS8ttgqwc/M/Kingbird%2C1%2Ccrop-M.png) (https://steinphotography.smugmug.com/Outdoor-Ontario/Outdoor-Ontario/i-Hh7NmWj/A)
(https://photos.smugmug.com/Outdoor-Ontario/Outdoor-Ontario/i-XnWGnLB/0/DWRNWT97hFQGqrd7j7PZsXx8GzZJGf4WtTwXWnwbv/M/Kingbird%20on%20wire%2Cgood%2Ccrop-M.png) (https://steinphotography.smugmug.com/Outdoor-Ontario/Outdoor-Ontario/i-XnWGnLB/A)
Eastern Kingbird(420mm f5.6)