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davidkramer

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Image Comments posted by davidkramer

    Squid smile

          11

    Excellent photo, Luca. Wish we could know what he's saying! You've got a great portfolio, you're obviously a bit of a macro manic! Do you focus manually or AF?

    By the way, is this definitely a cuttlefish and not a squid? Hope I'm not being an idiot ; )

    regards, David

  1. A nice picture and moment, but I think the sunburst is overexposed. Digital sensors struggle with these compared to film, but can still do a fair job. Usually settings required are at least f11-16, 1/350-500s and ISO 100. A wider angle lens will also reduce the size of the sunburst and allow you to get closer to the subjects while retaining the elements of the composition. Balancing sunbursts with flash is harder still, requires high power output and will limit the shutter speed to whatever the max synch speed is. Regards, David
  2. Taken at Julian Rocks near Byron Bay, New South Wales. Their

    numbers are deteriorating quickly, possibly related to fishing/boat traffic

    and shark nets set out to 'protect' beach goers along the eastern coast

    Ubirr sunset

          1

    This was taken just before sunset from Ubirr rock in Kakadu national

    park, Australia. It is a single exposure using polarising and GND filters

    with some minimal post processing. Thanks for comments

    Pygmy Seahorse

          4

    Photographing this 1cm tall chap presented significant technical

    challenges: he lives (perfectly camouflaged) on a huge seafan standing

    free of a vertical reef wall in a constant current on an archipelago near

    Sulawesi in Indonesia. Finding him is the first problem! Then is the

    difficulty in maneuvring myself and my big camera system close enough

    (approx 10cm working distance) without touching anything. He was less

    shy than others, who usually turn away abashed at the attention and

    the small light which assists my patience-trying attempts to autofocus

    in the dark blue gloom. Due to his vulnerability, I limited myself to taking

    a maximum of 3 photos as advised by the consciencious guides.

    Exposure is achieved in manual mode with both strobes set manually in

    1/2 stops, the lower dialled down for fill. Several species of pygmy are

    known, each is coloured and textured to match its chosen coral home.

  3. I had been to this headland before, seeeing a pair of these Sea Eagles

    patrolling their area of coast, gliding on the updraught high up in the

    sky. On bushwalks I always take my backup camera with my longest

    lens, preset servo AF and exposure metering for this type of shot, and

    always left 'on', ready to grab from its holster bag. Finally, after

    despairing of getting close enough to a bird of prey in flight, this one flew

    by in the late afternoon sun.

    Ground Breaking

          6
    Hi Don, very impressed by this image, worthy of a fine print and framing. Excellent composition/format/tonal properties. Am tempted to start thinking about having a camera body modified as my current exposures take 10-20secs and really require a completely windless day. Regards, David

    Leaf Curling Spider

          1

    These spiders create their own lair by weaving shut a fallen leaf in the

    middle of their webs. This may be for protection from predators, or to

    avoid being seen by their prey. It took a lot of waiting from this one to

    come out to investigate...

  4. Helpful comments welcome... especially regarding colour: I usually work

    in adobe RGB but this is edited in sRGB for the web. Find it hard to

    judge on my computer-I really need to get a better monitor! *sigh* $$$...

    This was my first outing with new reverse grad neutral density from

    Singh-Ray.

    Jewel anemones

          5
    great shot, which is giving me a strange impulse to make a Kiwi fruit desert all of a sudden ! : ) Aren't these quite unusual colours for these anemones? Regards, David

    Shrimps

          2

    Image taken at Julian Rocks, Byron Bay. These waters are a

    crossroads of temperate and subtropical species and this location is a

    riot of colour and life, thanks.

  5. I was glad the person bearing down on me at speed had a high world

    ranking at formula windsurfing. We were experimenting with a

    different look to the usual telephoto shots from shore, using a

    superwide lens in an underwater housing

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