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Gull
in sunset light (November 28, 2006)
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| Canon EOS 20D, Canon EF 600mm f/4 L IS USM,
1/1600 f/4, iso 400, handheld. Entella river, Italy. |
Many times the photographers forget or
misunderstand one of the most important aspects of photography: the
light. The "good light" is not the bright, while light of
sunny days....the good light is the light of early morning or late
afternoon, when the light becomes soft and warm. Whenever possible,
I try to photograph at the edges of the day: this photo is taken few
minutes before sunset, on the estuary of the Entella river.
The Entella is a small river between
Chiavari and Lavagna, fourteen kilometers from Genova. I discoverd
this place thank to my friend Christian - he often told me about the
gulls and the other birds of the Entella, so yesterday I decided to
visit the place. After a short walk, I reached the estuary...it is
not a beautiful place, it is close to the railway and the highway,
and the beach is quite polluted. Nevertheless, I was amazed by the
quantity of birds - there were hundred of gulls! Even though it
was possible to get low on the ground, I preferred to stay up,
handholding the 600. It is an heavy beast but I was able to handhold
it for few hours, of course with many short pauses. The image
stabilization is an huge help - it reduces a lot the hand shake and
it makes much easier to frame the subject. The most difficult thing
was to find the subject: the 600 f/4 has a very narrow angle of
view, and you need some experience to catch quickly the subject, in
particular when it is moving fast. I've set the camera on AFPS...in
this situations (birds in flight agains the sky), AFPS truly shines
- it rarely missed the subject. If I had used MFPS with central AF
area as my usual, it is likely that many photos would have been out
of focus, since it was extremely difficult to keep a single AF area
on the subject.
I
begun to photograph at 11 a.m., as soon as I arrived, with the
600 f/4 and 1.4x TC. When I reviewed the first shots in the
LCD screen (at the maximum magnification) I was a bit
surprised: all the photos were very soft, with strong
chromatic aberration. At first I tought that the lens or the
TC were dirty, but I cheched them and they were clean. Then, I
realized that the cause of the bad image quality was the heat
- even though we are at the end of November, it was a pretty
warm day, and between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. the temperature was
truly warm (I was sweating!), and the atmospheric heat ruined
the photos, since I was photographing distant subjects with a
supertele and there was a lot of (hot) air between the lens
and the subject. Anyway, even in cool days, the photos taken
in the middle of a sunny day are often quite bad - the light
is way too harsh.
Later in the afternoon the light
begun to improve, and the air become gradually cooler. The
gulls were flying back and forth from the river to the sea,
passing right above my head. I set the iso and the aperure to
get a shutter speed of at least 1/1000, and every time that a
gull come close I toke a burst of 5 or 6 photos. It has been
quite funny to handhold the 600...it is far from easy (if you
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| The
same species, photographed at midday. The harsh light
detracts a lot from the photo. |
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| are going to
handhold regularly the supertele, the 500 f4 might be a better
choice, to handhold the 600 you need to be quite fit), but it
gives great results for flight shoots, since you have a great
freedom of movement. |
Few minutes before sunset, the golden
light become orange and then red. I raised the ISO to 400 and I set
the aperture at f/4, as my usual. I was a bit tired after
handholding the 600 for hours, but when I saw this gull flying
towards me in red light the fatigue quickly disappeared.
Do you have
comments or questions?
If you have comments or questions about this
article, feel free to ask in the Juza
Nature Photography Discussion Forum!
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