View allAll Photos Tagged gray
I got a gray card and did a test. Both shots inside at night under lights from the ceiling fan. What a difference the gray card maid. Though still not perfect much better than the camera auto WB. The camera WB was to warm and could be corrected in RAW. The gray card WB was much better. It was a bit to cool. I could correct it in RAW.
Even if you have a Canon it maybe worth it to check it out. "No Nikon cracks!"
A disused farm building near the confluence of Hayeswater Gill and Pasture Beck, Hartsop, with Gray Crag forming the background.
I only went out whale watching twice earlier this year for the winter season. I saw this gray whale and another on this trip.
On the other trip I saw the CA-51 transient killer whales. I didn’t really get good pictures of them because it was in the evening, but I did get some video footage of them that is okay if you want to see how that went:
youtu.be/mMDjvIRyBXg
An Island Gray Fox searches for food in the picnic area of Prison's Harbor on Santa Cruz Island, CA. Photographed on 10/18/2013.
Highline Lake State Park, Colorado. Found on the Colorado Field Ornithologists Field trip during one of the only breaks in the rain.
Lifelist #131
Gray Leaf
Nick Perla
10/1/08
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The gray catbird (Dumetella carolinensis), also spelled grey catbird, is a medium-sized North American and Central American perching bird of the mimid family. It is the only member of the "catbird" genus Dumetella. Like the black catbird (Melanoptila glabrirostris), it is among the basal lineages of the Mimidae, probably a closer relative of the Caribbean thrasher and trembler assemblage than of the mockingbirds and Toxostoma thrashers.
Réal-D.-Carbonneau marsh, Sherbrooke, Quebec.
This Gray Fronted Dove, Leptotila rufaxilla, was photographed in Peru, as part of a research project utilizing motion-activated camera-traps.
You are invited to go WILD on Smithsonian's interactive website, Smithsonian WILD, to learn more about the research and browse photos like this from around the world.