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To capture this image of Bee, i had stay in the same place for nearly 40 minutes. i hope well woth it.
There is small blur. i hope you guys like it
pls comment
thx for viewing
| Brand: | NIKON CORPORATION |
| Camera: | Nikon D5000 |
| Lens: | 0.0 mm f/0.0 |
| Recording media: | RAW (digital) |
| Date Taken: | 10 Aug 2011 - 5:15 PM |
| Lens Max Aperture: | f/1.0 |
| Shutter Speed: | 1/640sec |
| Exposure Comp: | 0.0 |
| ISO: | 400 |
| Exposure Mode: | Manual |
| Metering Mode: | Center-weighted average |
| Flash: | No Flash |
| Title: | Flying Bee |
| Username: | |
| Uploaded: | 13 Aug 2011 - 12:17 AM |
| Tags: | Close up natue/ close up Bee, Close-up / macro, Wildlife / nature |
| VS Mode Rating |
100 (0% won) These stats show the percentage of wins and the rating score that your photo has achieved. You can go to the VS Mode by clicking on this icon. Signup to e2Signup to e2 to see which photo this has won or lost against in the vs mode |
| Votes: | 4 |
Comments
Nice shot, great patience. The blur adds a sense of movement to it actually, really like it.
Steve
Its a shame its blurred and it isnt motion blur so adds nothing to the image of the HOVERFLY not bee. also the insect is on the wrong side of the image and makes it looks unbalanced. with this kind of space the subject should always be moving into the space and not out of it. As the bg is out of focus (which it should be for this type of shot) it would be easy to put the space in front of the hoverfly by extending the image on the right and then cloning more bg into this space using the bg from the left. The image can then be re-cropped to re compose the insect on the left giving it space to fly into. You could also try adding some motion blur to give some sense of that speed mentioned above.
Hope this helps
Ian

Quote: Its a shame its blurred and it isnt motion blur so adds nothing to the image of the HOVERFLY not bee. also the insect is on the wrong side of the image and makes it looks unbalanced. with this kind of space the subject should always be moving into the space and not out of it. As the bg is out of focus (which it should be for this type of shot) it would be easy to put the space in front of the hoverfly by extending the image on the right and then cloning more bg into this space using the bg from the left. The image can then be re-cropped to re compose the insect on the left giving it space to fly into. You could also try adding some motion blur to give some sense of that speed mentioned above.
Hope this helps
Ian
THX very much ian very the tips. i'll rty do it the way you said.
thx again
regards
suresh
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