+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 11 of 11

Thread: Marwell cats

  1. #1
    Keeper of the Padlocks Site Moderator
    TPF Supporter

    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    UK - England
    Posts
    15,103
    My Gallery
    (0)
    My Photos Are OK to Edit
    Liked
    899 times

    Marwell cats

    Well the weather was lousy, but that was not the worst - the thing I hate most is the finger barrier! You know that barrier put up to keep you back from the wire netting in front of the cage so you don't put your finger in to feed the kitty - makes it very hard to get rid of it!
    Anyway bars were a pain and the cats uncooperative!


    f4, ISO 200, 1/100sec
    http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3481/...c0209dee_o.jpg
    one day I will learn to stop cutting off the legs!


    f5.6, ISO 200, 1/50sec
    http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3503/...24c9a3c5_o.jpg
    Shutter speed a little low, should have gone for more ISO - I just really hate going above 200. This is also a pretty large crop since something got into my focus and messed up a section - however its not too bad since a lot of what is lost is just dead space


    f5.6, ISO 400, 1/200sec
    http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3464/...2449ae1b_o.jpg
    The cat got into this positiong and I shot, but its not the shot I wanted - I really wanted to get behind the cat and get a shot of him looking out of the bars - unfortunately getting behind lead to the cage bars appearing in the lower half of the shot - that and I think the cat moved away too.


    f5.6, ISO 400, 1/40sec
    http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3425/...60231304_o.jpg
    The jaguars were very hard to shoot - their pen was not huge, infact I think it was the smallest of the big cats at the site - though split into two sections since there was a younger cat with a mother - so the father was separate. However it was a darker area and little space to get a shot without any bars


    f5.6, ISO 400, 1/160sec
    http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3536/...b934a5de_o.jpg
    Active kitty was pacing the bars a lot - there was another tiger pen on the others side of those bars so I think he/she had some interest in the tiger on the other side (however that tiger decided to spend the day dreaming)

    Well that is it for now - some not so easy shooting and my polariser appeared a few times. Unfortunately it tended to appear with the already darker area jaguars since it was there were I had glass pane to shoot through.
    Anyway any comments/crits/advice welcome - thank you
    Last edited by Overread; 02-08-2009 at 03:35 PM. Reason: links changed to flickr account
    How to get critique and feedback on your photography!

    Photo of the month April Voting now open

    The Mentor Scheme mentoring on TPF all are welcome to read and apply

    Best photos on the net!
    well at least I like to think so - sometimes

  2. # ADS

  3. #2
    I spend too much of my life on TPF!
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Location
    Purdue University
    Posts
    702
    My Gallery
    (0)
    My Photos Are OK to Edit
    Liked
    0 times
    #1 and #2 are my favs
    Canon 40D
    Canon 17-85mm
    Quanitary 70-300 FOR SALE $130


    You gas up the marker, put on the gloves, strap on the mask, and walk onto the field, it doesn't matter that you failed a test, that you didnt get the girl or that you got a ticket on the way here... your world is right for the next couple hours, this is your heaven on earth... live it... love it

    LEGIT

    KEGGER

  4. #3
    TPF Junkie!
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    State of Confusion
    Posts
    11,568
    My Gallery
    (0)
    My Photos Are NOT OK to Edit
    Liked
    830 times
    #1 & 2 are the best IMO because they lack any of the fence showing.

    The Liver is Evil and Must Be Punished.

    Shooter of FX, DX and MFT

    I could be wrong, but I doubt it.

    Two wrongs don't make a right, but three rights make a left.

  5. #4
    TPF Junkie!
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    Baltimore
    Posts
    3,552
    My Gallery
    (0)
    My Photos Are OK to Edit
    Liked
    120 times
    How did you and all of you as a matter of fact, but this series inparticular with the cheetahs, get such great shots thruough bars? Great series.

    Mark

    FOR SALE:IISigma 24-70mm F/2.8 EX DG HSM IF II (non-Macro)


    The Journey of One Lens Across the USA - Round 2

  6. #5
    Keeper of the Padlocks Site Moderator
    TPF Supporter

    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    UK - England
    Posts
    15,103
    My Gallery
    (0)
    My Photos Are OK to Edit
    Liked
    899 times
    thanks for the compliments all!

    I was just thinking - I think all of these actually missed the bars! The cheetah ones were shot from a raise and so I was able to shoot just over the fence and the leopard was shot through glass. I can't remember if the tiger here was glass or fence, but I think it was fence.

    The trick is to get your lens as close to the bars as possible - at zoos this tends to be tricky with many animals (especially big cats) as they have a barrier a good foot or so before the wire - so you can't get your lens right up to it. The other trick is to have the animal as far back from the wire as you can - that way when you focus you focus passed the bars - there was a great sport for getting really close cheetah shots where they were resting on the roof of their hut, but it was so close to the bars that they showed through each time.
    A wide aperture also helps with such shooting.
    I have shot through very tiny bars before - this shot http://i170.photobucket.com/albums/u...2/IMG_1648.jpg
    was taken through bars with about 1cm gaps between them - so very small. It only worked because the squirrel was way back into the cage and I was right up to the bars.

    The other trick is to always shoot through a gap - and be as straight on to the bars as you can - that way you lessen the change of having a bar go right through the middle of a shot - it tends to give a whity effect and sap contrast and saturation from the area it hits - with selective contrast boosting (usually a lot of contrast) you can restore these areas to a point where they look decent. Recently I have also found out that if you go to hues and select Cyan (as opposed to master) and desaturate it all the way you can also improve the look
    How to get critique and feedback on your photography!

    Photo of the month April Voting now open

    The Mentor Scheme mentoring on TPF all are welcome to read and apply

    Best photos on the net!
    well at least I like to think so - sometimes

  7. #6
    TPF Junkie!
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Scotland
    Posts
    1,244
    My Gallery
    (0)
    Liked
    0 times
    Nice series. #2 is my favourite, no distracting surroundings & looks quite natural. #1, too.. but still #2 for the win!

  8. #7
    TPF Noob!
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Posts
    1
    My Gallery
    (0)
    My Photos Are OK to Edit
    Liked
    0 times
    I enjoy #2 the most. The contrasting colors of the cat with the contrasting autumn leaves works well together. I also agree with you about shutter speed, it could be a bit quicker. Get shots, looks like a fun day.

  9. #8
    TPF Junkie!
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Fort Worth, TX
    Posts
    1,881
    My Gallery
    (5)
    My Photos Are NOT OK to Edit
    Liked
    5 times
    #2 is gorgeous
    Lyncca Harvey
    Nikon D700, D300, D100IR
    Lots of Lenses & Flashes
    www.lynccaharveyphotography.com
    Facebook Fan Page

  10. #9
    TPF Junkie!
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    Baltimore
    Posts
    3,552
    My Gallery
    (0)
    My Photos Are OK to Edit
    Liked
    120 times
    So basically long focal distances with a shallow DOF with good focusing will make them virtually not there?

    Mark

    FOR SALE:IISigma 24-70mm F/2.8 EX DG HSM IF II (non-Macro)


    The Journey of One Lens Across the USA - Round 2

  11. #10
    I spend too much of my life on TPF!
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Location
    St. Louis, Missouri
    Posts
    526
    My Gallery
    (0)
    My Photos Are OK to Edit
    Liked
    0 times
    Quote Originally Posted by Overread View Post


    f5.6, ISO 200, 1/50sec
    http://i170.photobucket.com/albums/u...0/IMG_2137.jpg
    Shutter speed a little low, should have gone for more ISO - I just really hate going above 200. This is also a pretty large crop since something got into my focus and messed up a section - however its not too bad since a lot of what is lost is just dead space
    In these situations I use aperture or shutter priority and leave the ISO set at auto, a slightly noisy 1600 ISO shot is a whole lot better than a delete because of camera shake.

    Having said that, you got some very nice shots, #1 and 2 especially.

    Primarily, I'm a snapshooter, occasionally I will accidentally get a good photograph.

    Nikon D40, Nikon 35mm f1.8, Nikon 18-55mm, Quantaray 70-300mm (Tamron AF 70-300mm F4-5.6 Di LD rebadged by Ritz/Wolf), SB-400

    Also currently using:
    Kodak Pony 135
    Vivitar XM300 APS camera
    Minolta Freedom Zoom 130 Date



  12. #11
    Keeper of the Padlocks Site Moderator
    TPF Supporter

    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    UK - England
    Posts
    15,103
    My Gallery
    (0)
    My Photos Are OK to Edit
    Liked
    899 times
    Thanks for the compliments all - the 2nd shot being popular surprises me since whilst it lacks the bars element of the latter shots I still prefer them.

    Quote Originally Posted by Markw View Post
    So basically long focal distances with a shallow DOF with good focusing will make them virtually not there?

    Mark
    And being close to the bars - that really helps - if you can press your lens hood (I never want to put the front of my lens actually on the bars - way way to risky!) right on the bars your going good - but remember to watch the angle - if you start twisting too far either way then you can get bars appearing.

    And I don't know about using auto ISO - firstly I don't even have the option to use it on my camera , but even if I did I find that above ISO 400 the noise starts to get way too much for my liking and at 1600 I think it would be enough for me to discount the shot. On a midrange body it might be a better choice
    How to get critique and feedback on your photography!

    Photo of the month April Voting now open

    The Mentor Scheme mentoring on TPF all are welcome to read and apply

    Best photos on the net!
    well at least I like to think so - sometimes


 

Sponsors

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts

Similar Threads

  1. April Cats - Shop Cats
    By micros in forum Nature & Wildlife
    Replies: 1
    Last Post: 05-03-2010, 08:07 PM
  2. Marwell Zoo
    By neogfx in forum Landscape & Cityscape
    Replies: 7
    Last Post: 07-18-2007, 03:05 PM
  3. Marwell - 56k beware
    By neogfx in forum Landscape & Cityscape
    Replies: 6
    Last Post: 03-29-2007, 02:33 PM
  4. Marwell Zoo sunday 28th of May
    By lostprophet in forum Locations & Meetup forum
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 04-24-2006, 05:54 AM
  5. Big Cats @ Marwell Zoo :)
    By Az_GTi in forum Landscape & Cityscape
    Replies: 11
    Last Post: 02-17-2006, 03:00 PM