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KenTT's Avatar
KenTT
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04-05-11, 11:48 PM
#1

Samantha

A picture of the wife ageing horse Sam, she still has some winter coat.

I'm not to sure on the crop of this picture so any thoughts would be great, thanks.

Kit 1
1DSmkIII & 1DmkIV
Canon EF70-200L f/2.8 IS
Canon EF100L macro f/2.8 IS
Canon EF85L f/1.2 mkII
Canon EF24-105L f/4 IS
Canon EF300L f/2.8 IS
Canon EF17-40L f/4
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05-05-11, 12:57 AM
#2

Re: Samantha

Nice photo Ken - the only thing I'd suggest is editing out the pink-ish light bulb that seems to be protruding from poor Sam's side
Kit 1
Nikon D300
Nikon 55-200mm VR
Kit 2
Nikon D40
Nikon 18-55mm
My Compact/P&S: Panasonic Lumix TZ7


     
KenTT's Avatar
KenTT
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05-05-11, 01:46 AM
#3

Re: Samantha

Hey Azz, your right I didn't notice it or give it a thought. It's actually a red feeding bucket in the field behind her, but the 85L f1.2, does such a good job of blurring the BG
Kit 1
1DSmkIII & 1DmkIV
Canon EF70-200L f/2.8 IS
Canon EF100L macro f/2.8 IS
Canon EF85L f/1.2 mkII
Canon EF24-105L f/4 IS
Canon EF300L f/2.8 IS
Canon EF17-40L f/4
Other Kit
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05-05-11, 09:11 AM
#4

Re: Samantha

Although it's great colour and a lovely horse, I think the depth of field is too shallow and makes the horse too isolated. One step to the left would have hidden the pink, and the horse, IMHO, needs to be in focus at least to the body, showing the lovely chestnut colours with it's environment less blurred. It's in a pleasant field and we sort of need to see that either in focus or more recognisable. The trees and grey blobs to the left over shoulder are distracting and unnatural. That is a very expensive and fantastic lens, great on some human portraits but needs careful use. Just my view of course.
Kit 1
Nikon D700
Nikon 28-70 f2.8 ED AF-S (The Beast)
Nikon 80-200mm f2.8
Tamron 24-135 SP
Nikon 300mm f4
Nikon 70-300mm VR
Sigma 18-50mm f2.8 (DX)
Nikon 28-105mm (great walkaround on D700!)
Lensbaby Composer
Nikon 20-35mm f2.8
Nikon SB800
Kit 2
Nikon D300
Nikon 20mm f2.8
Nikon 24mm f2.8
Nikon 28mm f2.8
Nikon 35mm f2
Nikon 50mm f1.4
Nikon 85mm f1.8
Micro-Nikon 60mm f2.8
Micro-Nikon 105mm f2.8
Tamron 28-75mm f2.8


     
KenTT's Avatar
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05-05-11, 10:43 AM
#5

Re: Samantha

Quote:
Originally Posted by BlackCloud View Post
Although it's great colour and a lovely horse, I think the depth of field is too shallow and makes the horse too isolated. One step to the left would have hidden the pink, and the horse, IMHO, needs to be in focus at least to the body, showing the lovely chestnut colours with it's environment less blurred. It's in a pleasant field and we sort of need to see that either in focus or more recognisable. The trees and grey blobs to the left over shoulder are distracting and unnatural. That is a very expensive and fantastic lens, great on some human portraits but needs careful use. Just my view of course.
Hi BC

Thanks for taking the time and the detailed critique, You've made me think about this more and your right, I think I know where I went wrong on the excessive shallow DOF.
I kept reviewing the shots on the little screen at the back of the camera and on the mk3 the screen is only low resolution this means you don't tend to notice that the back end of the horse is out of focus by quite so much.
Kit 1
1DSmkIII & 1DmkIV
Canon EF70-200L f/2.8 IS
Canon EF100L macro f/2.8 IS
Canon EF85L f/1.2 mkII
Canon EF24-105L f/4 IS
Canon EF300L f/2.8 IS
Canon EF17-40L f/4
Other Kit
View my profile to see my other kit!


     
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05-05-11, 02:38 PM
#6

Re: Samantha

I too would like to have seen more of the horse's body in sharp focus. The only immediate solution would be a tight crop on just the head. That sort of defeats the purpose of using the extremely shallow depth of field lens. With the bulk of the background behind the horse's head being sky a different shooting angle might have been more appropriate. I don't know the circumstances.

18mm Fujinon
35mm Fujinon
60mm Fujinon
18-55 Fujinon
55-200mm Fujinon
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My Compact/P&S: Fuji X-E1


     
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05-05-11, 08:41 PM
#7

Re: Samantha

lovely shot!

Looks very noble

Kit 1
Olympus E510


     
KenTT's Avatar
KenTT
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05-05-11, 09:04 PM
#8

Re: Samantha

Quote:
Originally Posted by bobmielke View Post
I too would like to have seen more of the horse's body in sharp focus. The only immediate solution would be a tight crop on just the head. That sort of defeats the purpose of using the extremely shallow depth of field lens. With the bulk of the background behind the horse's head being sky a different shooting angle might have been more appropriate. I don't know the circumstances.

Bob I really like that crop, if you don't mind I think I'll use it on the full resolution and do a print.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Grumpy View Post
lovely shot!

Looks very noble

Thanks Dave.
Kit 1
1DSmkIII & 1DmkIV
Canon EF70-200L f/2.8 IS
Canon EF100L macro f/2.8 IS
Canon EF85L f/1.2 mkII
Canon EF24-105L f/4 IS
Canon EF300L f/2.8 IS
Canon EF17-40L f/4
Other Kit
View my profile to see my other kit!


     
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05-05-11, 10:20 PM
#9

Re: Samantha

If you want it just as I edited it add a slight vignette and do some sharpening on just the horse. I also added an 8 pixel black border to the shot. These are all part of my normal processing routine.
18mm Fujinon
35mm Fujinon
60mm Fujinon
18-55 Fujinon
55-200mm Fujinon
Other Kit
View my profile to see my other kit!
My Compact/P&S: Fuji X-E1


     
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06-05-11, 11:40 AM
#10

Re: Samantha

Lovely shot, I didn't notice the pink blob straight away, don't mind it either. I think soemtimes it's the imperfections in photo's that make them interesting.
Kit 1
Nikon D5100
Nikon VR 18-55 AF
Nikon VR 55-200 AF
My Compact/P&S: Panasonic Lumix DMC-TZ8


     
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1DSmkIII, Canon EF85L f/1.2 mkII

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