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Deepak Mistry
23-09-2018, 12:59 PM
Happy to announce body upgrade to D7200 !

Red Vented Bulbul enjoying the sunset. Nikon D7200, F/6.3, 1/2000 sec., ISO-1000, 150-600 mm @ 300 mm handheld slight crop.

Mrudul Godbole
24-09-2018, 10:32 AM
Congratulations on the new camera :).

Nice light. Liked the title :). This composition looks fine, but I feel you could have moved just a bit more to the left, to get more eye contact. The space at the bottom is distracting, more space at the top could have been better. There seems to be some loss of details. It is cropped from which side? Thanks for sharing.

Disha Parchani
24-09-2018, 11:00 AM
Wow! It's a beautiful snap! :)

Samrat Sarkar
24-09-2018, 12:04 PM
Nice click Deepak ji...
If I read your image from my imagination.... you may wait.. Bulbuls never stay much time in a single perch. They fly. They glide for a while spreading their wings and tail when they take off... and you would have capture that flight shot with golden back-light. Never stop thinking, never stop your imagination and your observation when you are clicking wildlife, technicality of camera/ setting etc always comes after that.

Congrats for your new body... look forward more from you...

Samrat

Deepak Mistry
25-09-2018, 07:30 PM
Congratulations on the new camera :).

Nice light. Liked the title :). This composition looks fine, but I feel you could have moved just a bit more to the left, to get more eye contact. The space at the bottom is distracting, more space at the top could have been better. There seems to be some loss of details. It is cropped from which side? Thanks for sharing.

Thanks Mridul for your inputs. However moving to the left was not an option due to a muddy ditch. It is a 30% crop from the right mainly. Maybe the loss of details was due to the NR in Lightroom. I'm yet learning to use it properly.

Deepak Mistry
25-09-2018, 07:34 PM
Nice click Deepak ji...
If I read your image from my imagination.... you may wait.. Bulbuls never stay much time in a single perch. They fly. They glide for a while spreading their wings and tail when they take off... and you would have capture that flight shot with golden back-light. Never stop thinking, never stop your imagination and your observation when you are clicking wildlife, technicality of camera/ setting etc always comes after that.

Congrats for your new body... look forward more from you...

Samrat

Thanks Samrat. I'll definitely try out your suggestion. I do have a snap of the same specimen in flight. I'll share it in a separate thread.

Prashant Gandhi
27-09-2018, 02:42 PM
Beautiful picture! :)