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I enlarged the area with the most colorful and delicate plumes but some of the finer detail is not in focus enough to please me and I will make another attempt to photograph it a little closer.
This is from a recently posted image of a window with dark red shutters. It was suggested I cropped the shutters--not sure which I prefer.
Interseeded cover crops on Jack Boyer farm near Reinbeck, Iowa. Boyer used a spin seeder on trials to test success of seeding a cover crops mix into seed corn when corn is at V4 to V6 stage of growth. This is a Practical Farmers of Iowa trial to determine viability of interseeding cover crops and effect on seed corn yield.
Please Credit: NRCS/SWCS photo by Lynn Betts
The aliens have landed on Brighton seafront and left behind these crop circles as evidence.
You can see the old west pier on the horizon.
I converted to black and white then added some grain for an older feel then dodged and burned to bring out the detail in the foreground.
This picture was on explore 20th October 2010 thankyou.
www.markcallananphotography.com
This was taken in July 2010. I don't know why I've only just posted. Not all that happy with the title. Open to suggestions!
My original edit of this image in 2012 was okay, but I wasn't satisfied with the detail of the bison's head. It's difficult to shows details of dark brown eyes against dark brown hair. Today's editing tools are much better, so I took a tiff file that I used to make a print and re-edited it. The details of the entire head are much better. This was taken in Grasslands National Park, in Saskatchewan.
Still a shot that is a work in progress, I like this angle much better because at least the clock is giving such good constant motion. Still I think it's too wide and probably that MPLS is too small of a city and there just isn't enough late night worker bees downtown... Oh well, maybe I'll just practice this shot more so I can get it in a bigger city when I have the chance.
This is a cropped image from my D7200 and 300mm lens. I would not have been able to get this level of detail on the D200. The image sensor on the D7200 is fantastic... and this little bird isn't bad either.