The new Hoya PRO1 Digital uv filter that Donald had wisely recommended came in the mail today; so, I headed outdoors to try out the new Canon 60mm prime lens (now that it had protection.)
I was just going to start working on some f2.8 landscapes that Donald was very anxious to see.....
f2.8!
When this guy came bounding in front of me!
Tom had been throwing the ball for him for about twenty minutes. He loves to retrieve!
He became too slow, though, and when Tom held the ball out for him, Una swooped in and stole it.
Actually, she's quite a trickster! Here she is lying in wait to ambush Chubbs!
Tom and the puppies went in and I tried to photograph some abstract/extract grass...
Not realizing that the sun had gone down and the wind had picked up. Next time I won't go out without my long johns!
(Sorry, I think this is reading suspiciously like a blog post! )
Questions:
1) What makes a good "in the field" portrait of an animal? DOF? Action but frozen? Light? Zoom? Personality? I am really asking! Please feel free to nitpick these pet photos!
2) I don't know quite what's going on but, when I go to sharpen or post process a lot of these photos with this new lens, I feel like I ruin them. Most of these are sooc. Are they okay? The evening light was SO mellow - when I try to lighten them, it changes the whole mood of what it was like.
The first landscape and the grass is just silly but
3) I've come to the conclusion that this last photo of the barn is as far as I can post process these kind of exposures (and it's not much) without going "tonally eek!" What do you think of it? It's not my very best effort but, I'd still like to know what you think. (post process in iphoto, I mean. I have a growing pile of photos waiting to be post processed when I make the jump to something better, this month.)
Thanks!