Rolling Tongue
Copyright ©2010, Hans Gerlich
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Photographer: |
Hans Gerlich
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Folder: |
H Gerlich |
Uploaded: |
19-Jul-2010 20:02 CEST |
Current Rating: |
7.00/1
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Model release available: |
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Camera: |
Olympus E3 |
Exposure time: |
1/320 sec |
Aperture: |
F 7,1 |
Focal length: |
338 mm |
Lens: |
ED 50-200 & EX 25 |
Focusing method: |
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ISO: |
400 |
White balance: |
Auto |
Flash: |
no |
Image format: |
RAW |
Processing applied: |
cropped & resized |
Various: |
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Image resized to: |
614x800 |
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Beautiful rolling tongue...
Nice. Fine colours, sharpening and "bokeh"
Very fine focus onto the moth that seems absolutly realistic.
However, I find the foreground a little distracting.
Maybe a matter of perspective ?
I like your picture very much.
Regards.
Victor Biefnot at 19:24 CEST on 22-Jul-2010 [Reply]
NO SUBJECT
The photo is not sharpend on the PC, focus and aperture just fine ;-)
It is not a moth, but a butterfly with the name Red admiral (Vanessa admiral). I think too the foreground is a bit distracting, maybe another crop is better. Thanks for your comment and rating.
Hans Gerlich at 00:06 CEST on 23-Jul-2010 [Reply]
Sorry
Hans Gerlich wrote:
> The photo is not sharpend on the PC, focus and aperture just fine ;-)
> It is not a moth, but a butterfly with the name Red admiral (Vanessa admiral). I think too
> the foreground is a bit distracting, maybe another crop is better. Thanks for your comment
> and rating.
>
Victor Biefnot at 11:35 CEST on 23-Jul-2010 [Reply]
NO SUBJECT
Victor Biefnot wrote:
> Hans Gerlich wrote:
> > The photo is not sharpend on the PC, focus and aperture just fine ;-)
> > It is not a moth, but a butterfly with the name Red admiral (Vanessa admiral). I think too
> > the foreground is a bit distracting, maybe another crop is better. Thanks for your comment
> > and rating.
> >
> Sorry for this erroneous designation: how is it possible to confuse a butterfly with a moth?
Surely my english is not perfect yet...In fact, it's scientific latin name is: " Lepidoptera Nymphalidea Vanessa
Atalanta ", Admiral, if you prefer. In french, we call it " le Vulcain ".
Best regards.
Victor Biefnot at 11:53 CEST on 23-Jul-2010 [Reply]