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Yes I have done it also but not on foot@RichF , actually I shoot also a lion with 105mm from a safari vehicle. Animals come close to cars. The other point is that you can shoot the animal in environment with 105mm, it must not be always a portrait or close-up with a telephoto lens.
...
@John Woodworth , what are you writing about is also no-go. But it is a book what are you reading, maybe it was not in reality? I don't know why they did it in the park.. They could have done it in their own garden or what ever...
Great shots and yes I have ... I have use 70-200 f/2.8 and 35-150 Tamron one of my favorites ... but then I have photographed landscapes and still life with a 600 mm f/4 ... so a bit of whatever I have in my handWe all know the famous quote of Robeert Capa: „if your photographs aren't good enough you're not close enough“
Well.. the other day I was watching a presentation of David Yarrow in YouTube where he said: „Will you photograph a beautiful woman with the 600mm lens? .. And why do you do it with animals? … go and buy a portrait lens …“
I did.
I loved his photographs. I thought that he was right and sometimes I had a lion or a hyena just beside my vehicle in the dusk and didn’t have the good lens to capture it. 105mm had f1.4.
I took it with me on safari and the first „beautiful woman“ I’ve got in front of my lens was … Guinea Fowl!
Not beautiful? Well...
The Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.
The other resident of our camping place was a ground squirrel and it was at least definitely a „woman“.
They were very hospitable and agreed to pose for me a bit.
I took one photo of each model with 105mm portrait lens on D500 (DX) and one with 500mm PF on D850 (FX).
The photos actually looked l the same. Yes, it is clear, with 105mm I was closer and with 500mm I stepped back. Was the DoF the same?
I took a full body portrait of ground squirrel with 105mm at f2 and I might be staying about 2m from her. The bird was taken with f4 but I was closer, let’s say 1,5m. The both cases on DX with 105mm give me 3cm of DoF. To have the same DoF with 500/5.6 and FX I must be stepping back to 5m what is very plausible. So, the same (approximately) DoF of the portrait lens and the telephoto lens.
But do you see the difference? Which picture is taken with which lens? Could somebody guess? (I am quite sure that some of you can identify the lens correctly!)
Photo 1. Guinea Fowl.
View attachment 28265
Photo 2. Ground Squirrel.
View attachment 28266
Photo 3. Guinea Fowl.
View attachment 28267
Photo 4. Ground Squirrel.
View attachment 28268
Have you ever tried to photograph the animals with portrait (85-105mm) or longer portrait (135mm) lens?
yes, @Woodyg3 , you are right! We are calling it distortion but it is the perspective to call it correctly!The difference you are referring to is not distortion, it is perspective
great!! you noticed my miss of DoF!was due to depth of field and background blur
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David Yarrow Accused of Feeding Fox for Photo, Denies Wrongdoing
Renowned wildlife photographer David Yarrow has found himself at the center of a new controversy this month after another photographer levied claims thatpetapixel.com
Not anonymous, it was reported to have taken place in Grand Teton at Colter Bay.I'm reading a book by Joe McNally.
He tells of taking a dinosaur model out to a park and chainsawing it into a tree. Then they fled the scene...Actually, it was more like a bush.
Park remains anonymous. Sssshhh...Keep this on the DL.
I'm reading a book by Joe McNally.
He tells of taking a dinosaur model out to a park and chainsawing it into a tree. Then they fled the scene...Actually, it was more like a bush.
Park remains anonymous. Sssshhh...Keep this on the DL.
![]()
David Yarrow Accused of Feeding Fox for Photo, Denies Wrongdoing
Renowned wildlife photographer David Yarrow has found himself at the center of a new controversy this month after another photographer levied claims thatpetapixel.com
He knew it was a violation of park rules and did it anyway. Scum.
search this link for 'chainsaw'
![]()
Photography Secrets from One of the World's Top Shooters | CreativePro Network
Excerpted from The Moment It Clicks by Joe McNally. Copyright 2008. Used with permission of Pearson Education, Inc., and New Riders Wing It Sometimes, you just gotta wing it. Got a job to shoot a photo portfolio of the overlarge freshmen NCAA hoopsters for Sports Illustrated. Started conjuring...creativepro.com
That would have been 17 years ago, with a polyurethane model. Note sure "scum" is the phrase I'd use to describe McNally.
I know of several people that I'd like to see try it.... and I don't think it's a good idea to photograph polar bears with a portrait lens...
Here are mySo, nobody tries a guess? You don't feel confident? You told already about those two points in your posts. Don't hesitate, try to identify the lens!
Good point about showing the enviroment.
I just checked David's YT channel and watched his latest video. He sure likes to get up close and personal with the Hippos!
Takes quite a risk, scares a few in the process but gets a couple of really nice photos.
I also checked his website and he has a really nice porfolio, although without many bird photos...![]()
We all know the famous quote of Robeert Capa: „if your photographs aren't good enough you're not close enough“
Well.. the other day I was watching a presentation of David Yarrow in YouTube where he said: „Will you photograph a beautiful woman with the 600mm lens? .. And why do you do it with animals? … go and buy a portrait lens …“
I did.
I loved his photographs. I thought that he was right and sometimes I had a lion or a hyena just beside my vehicle in the dusk and didn’t have the good lens to capture it. 105mm had f1.4.
I took it with me on safari and the first „beautiful woman“ I’ve got in front of my lens was … Guinea Fowl!
Not beautiful? Well...
The Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.
The other resident of our camping place was a ground squirrel and it was at least definitely a „woman“.
They were very hospitable and agreed to pose for me a bit.
I took one photo of each model with 105mm portrait lens on D500 (DX) and one with 500mm PF on D850 (FX).
The photos actually looked l the same. Yes, it is clear, with 105mm I was closer and with 500mm I stepped back. Was the DoF the same?
I took a full body portrait of ground squirrel with 105mm at f2 and I might be staying about 2m from her. The bird was taken with f4 but I was closer, let’s say 1,5m. The both cases on DX with 105mm give me 3cm of DoF. To have the same DoF with 500/5.6 and FX I must be stepping back to 5m what is very plausible. So, the same (approximately) DoF of the portrait lens and the telephoto lens.
But do you see the difference? Which picture is taken with which lens? Could somebody guess? (I am quite sure that some of you can identify the lens correctly!)
Photo 1. Guinea Fowl.
View attachment 28265
Photo 2. Ground Squirrel.
View attachment 28266
Photo 3. Guinea Fowl.
View attachment 28267
Photo 4. Ground Squirrel.
View attachment 28268
Have you ever tried to photograph the animals with portrait (85-105mm) or longer portrait (135mm) lens?