View allAll Photos Tagged brows
My first shot of these, White Browed Babbler,Pomatostomus supercilius, Taken at Lake Towerring, Western Australia, We called in briefly there on our way home, overcast again, It seems a lovely spot. These birds are such characters.
1/800 ISO 800 handheld.
Before (left) and one week after (right) pre-trichial browplasty and upper eyelid blepharoplasty. Notice the elevation of the brows, as well as the freckles which demonstrates how much the forehead is lifted. Brows can be lifted while maintaining a natural looking eyebrow height and contour. There is still some swelling and bruising, as this is just one week after surgery.
Rufous-browed Peppershrike (Cyclarhis gujanensis) in Reserva Natural Cerro Tzankujil. San Marcos la Laguna, Guatemala.
Photo for members of JKPP to use
my JKPP thread: www.flickr.com/groups/portraitparty/discuss/7215762986602...
These images were taken with a view to attacking the fashion model stereotype. I was watching a documentary about the modelling industry and was really interested in the way the models that were interviewed gave such an enthusiastic response to the question ‘what is your biggest flaw?’ They all answered without hesitation, each presenting us with a different overly dramatised flaw which to me and I assume to others who were watching were hard to locate and the model who claimed to have mismatched feet displayed sincere unhappiness at this her biggest flaw. It was as though she had just said ‘the wart on my nose.’ This was what gave me the idea to photograph models with comically exaggerated flaws. Close up black and white, serious images but with false body parts to make the flaws. They are satirically obvious almost to the point where you don’t immediately notice because of the models professional attitude. The photographs are like a models worst nightmare, they are seriously mocking some working models, attacking their vanity and their need to be perfect in order to work. It is at that sort of professional level where the models are forced to scrutinise every inch of themselves in order to please the most top end clients. Everything has to be perfect. These six images are satirical take on this concept. I selected these images because as a six, they have quite an interesting impact and concept. I think they represent me as a photographer quite well, they not only display my photographic preference but also the kind of subjects I enjoy to work with. These images are not part of a project in my foundation, but ones I have been working on in my spare time.
A small number of wagtails seemed to live around the rooftops of the various hotels along the edge of Baga Fields. These White-browed are larger than the the slightly commoner White Wagtails.
White-browed Scrubwren, Sericornis frontalis
Coming down from Evans Lookout, where the track meets the Grose there were plenty of these scrubwrens flitting around. They were looking for crumbs dropped by snacking walkers. I was keen to photograph them because I only have one previous shot of them. The complicating factors were the low light level, and my two-year old son who insisted on holding my finger -- so I was shooting one-handed.
(Grand Canyon, Blackheath)
The Yellow-browed Bulbul is a species of bulbul found in the forests of southern India and Sri Lanka. It is mainly yellow on the underside and olive above with a distinct yellow brow. They are easily located by their loud calls but tend to skulk within foliage below the forest canopy.
This bulbul is about 20 cm long, lacks a crest and has the upperparts olive green with a prominent yellow brow and goggle with the under parts being all yellow. The sexes do not differ in plumage. The bill is black and the iris is reddish brown. Yellow-browed Bulbuls are found in pairs or small groups and call loudly. The calls include a whistle like calls and sharp pick-wick notes. They feed mainly on berries and insects. The breeding season is during the dry spell before the monsoons, mainly January to May. The nest is a cup built in a low fork covered with moss and cobwebs on the outside, giving the appearance of a large White-eye nest, and lined with fine root fibres. Nestlings are fed with caterpillars, soft insects and berr
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