Monday, February 6, 2012

Zoo Photography: Prairie Dogs

Black-Tailed Prairie Dog
Canon 1D Mark II with EF 300mm f4L @ 1/3200s F/5.6 ISO 400.

I love these black-tailed prairie dogs at the Maryland Zoo in Baltimore. Their exhibit near the front entrance is normally my first and last stops whenever I visit the zoo. Whenever I first approach them, they become alert and some even rush to their burrows. The key to shooting them is using a long focal length lens, getting as low as you can to shoot them at their eye level, and waiting until they get acclimated to your presence. I've also found that sunny days are best to show the shine in their fur as cloudy days bring out more of the dark areas of their fur.

I like the closed eyes on the first fellow as it seems like he/she was trying to look cute for the picture. The second one takes a break from munching on his carrot to observe me and my intentions. After a few seconds, he happily resumed his snack.

I didn't do much editing on these images. I shot in RAW (as I always do) and edited in Lightroom 3. I use a preset I call 'QuickEazy' that I use on the vast majority of my images. Individual settings in LR3 will depend on your camera and the image out of the camera. Adjust and see what comes out to your liking. With the Canon 300mm F/4L lens, an excellent zoo photography lens, I almost always shoot at f/5.6 to give me some speed and a good bokeh. ISO 400 helps with keeping the shutter speed up, too. In shaded areas I'll pump it up to ISO 800. I have found myself using up to ISO 3200 but that was on indoor exhibits such as snakes and frogs. To help with the speed and because the animals are usually closer, I use the 100mm F/2.8L Macro lens instead. I'll talk more about low-light zoo photography in a future post.

Black-Tailed Prairie Dog
Canon 1D Mark II with EF 300mm f4L @ 1/3200s F/5.6 ISO 400.

Blog Now Linked to Website

After much work, sweat, hair-pulling, pg-rated cursing, and hissing, I've managed to link the photocroaker blog to the photocroaker website. This has been in the works for a while but I had been pushing it back because of the sheer amount of code sweet-talking and/or arm-twisting involved. After 16 hours, I'd say this baby is ready to be taken for a ride. Will post the first post with images after I've had the customary five hours of sleep and a bowl of cereal. For now, I have to jump in the saddle and sail into that proverbial land where elves and eskimos reside. Sweet ridings!!!
p.s. click on this fellow to see my happy dance...p.s. p.s. don't say I didn't warn you!!!

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

photocroaker.com

I have a website with the address photocroaker.com where I will be showcasing my work and selling it.
I haven't been able to post much on here, but I have learned a lot in the past few months of working professionally that I'm willing to share.
If you have a question, please shoot me an email and I will respond asap.

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

My Review of EF 24-70mm f2.8L USM Zoom Lens

Originally submitted at OneCall

This new lens does what many pros thought couldn't be done - replace the previous L-series 28-70 f/2.8 lens with something even better. Extended coverage to an ultra-wide angle 24mm makes it ideal for digital as well as film shooters, and the optics are even better than before with two Aspheric...


Great Everyday Lens!!!

By PhotoCroaker from Baltimore, MD on 6/15/2010

 

5out of 5

Pros: Fast / accurate auto-focus, Easily Interchangeable, Consistent Output, Nice Bokeh, Strong Construction, Durable

Cons: Heavy

Best Uses: Weddings/Events, Indoors/Low Light, Landscape/Scenery

Describe Yourself: Semi-pro Photographer

I had to send back the first copy I received due to massive focusing and color defects, but the second copy made me believe in this lens.
The bokeh is butter-smooth and the colors (especially greens and blues) are as vivid as they can be. I used to shoot RAW all the time so that I could touch up the photographs in post-editing, but I don't need to do it anymore with this lens. Now I shoot JPEG 99% of the time.
Be aware that this is a tank...heavy as they can make them. But you can get used to it with time. The 2.8 is worth it in lowlight indoor situations.

(legalese)

Monday, May 31, 2010

Fort Ontario, New York, Pics

Here are a few photographs I took this Memorial Day Weekend at Fort Ontario in Oswego, New York. Great fun learning about the fort and its illustrious history and I hope to visit one day when the artifacts are back in their original place where they belong. I wrote an article about my first visit to the fort here. These pictures were taken a week after the visit mentioned in the article, and as soon as I post the article that goes with these, I will post a link here as well. Hope you enjoy them.