Friday, February 22, 2013

Favourite Photo Friday - 22/2/13

Today Astrid is exactly 20 months old but today's photo is from when she was exactly 1 week old. 

Here she is participating in her favourite activity, bath time. Oh how small she was! She was also much quieter, stayed still and didn't talk back! Oh the days where you got no sleep but they was so quiet and peaceful. On the upside she is just as cute now and heaps of fun!



Photo details:
D80 with Tamron 90mm f2.8
ISO 640, focal length 90mm
Exposure: 1/80 @ f/4.5

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

A Summer Day in the Paddock

Often at the end of our walks with the alpacas we go to a paddock near our house to let them off the leads and have a run around.  Astrid loves going there and likes to sit on our picnic rug, chatting and playing with our keys and phones, feeding peppermints to the alpacas and chasing them around.

A few weeks ago I took the camera out to grab some shots of her, I posted one of my favourites here. She is soooo grown up now! For comparison the top two photos in this post were also taken in the paddock, in February last year, 11 months before these ones........ how quickly they change......

Here she is chasing a pesky fly around....... and running around like the little lady she is now. I love the many expressions on her face, so cheeky and expressive :)









Friday, February 15, 2013

Favourite Photo Friday - 15/2/13

This photo was taken in July 2010, during our dive holiday to the Solomon Islands. The second half of the trip saw us head to Uepi Island, which required a flight on a (very) small plane, taking off from a grass runway populated by chooks, followed by a boat (read dinghy) transfer of over an hour through open ocean.

Once we arrived on Uepi Island, it was a beautiful sight..... A small tropical dive resort in the middle of nowhere. We arrived at our villa just as the sun was about to set. It was a truly beautiful sunset, and despite being in the middle of unpacking I grabbed my camera and took a couple of shots. I almost didn't bother as we were tired and hot and wanted a drink and dinner. Anto and I commented to each other, 'we are here for over a week, it'll be like this every night, right?' While we had other lovely sunsets, none were as good as that first one so I'm glad we got some nice shots of it.

 This was the view from our verandah, looking out into the ocean, as the sun set. Not bad, hey?


Photo details:
D80 with Nikkor 50mm f1.8
ISO 400, focal length 50mm
Exposure: 1/60 @ f/13

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Chasing butterflies.......

I like a bit of macro insect work, and used to spend hours chasing bees, beetle and spiders around the garden for ages. I adore bee photos, some of my favourites are here: Blossoms and Bees

I have not done many macro insect photos lately. Chasing a small child makes chasing insects more challenging.  The other afternoon, on yet another very hot day, we were outside getting the clothes off the line and noticed that the area where the alpacas sprinklers are located - yes our alpacas have sprayers set up for them for very hot days - was populated by some very large butterflies. They had been drawn to the wet ground and were flapping around playing in the mist.  We see these butterflies quite a bit. They are quite large and very pretty. Unfortunately they have an affinity for our citrus trees and tend to grow from caterpillars that will destroy our citrus overnight. The butterflies are gorgeous, but the caterpillars drive me nuts with their destruction.

Anyway, with our friendly butterflies fluttering about everywhere I headed back inside to grab my camera and macro lens. I have never managed to get a decent photo of these guys before. They fly high and fast and are tricky to capture.  Although they were far from staying still they were easier to track as they were playing in the water.

This was the first test for the new camera on moving insects.  On my old camera I use a mix of auto-focus and manual focus but the D80 only has 11 AF points and you have to shift between them using the track pad. On the D7000 there are a greater number of AF options and  these include 3D and 'auto' tracking. It also has 39 AF points.  I played around manually adjusting AF points and also gave the auto AF tracking a go. It did a surprisingly good job at tracking the butterflies and I got quite a few well focused shots. I do prefer to adjust my focus points myself but the auto-tracking and 3D tracking worked well in this situation.

Of course climbing around the wet ground taking photos of fast moving insects was complicated by a toddler running around squealing and trying to 'catch' them. She had a ball but wasn't the most helpful photography assistant.

Anyway, here are a few photos from our butterfly chasing session.  Not my best macro work ever, but still not too bad, and a nice close up look at these pretty insects. Keep in mind when looking at the photos, that the butterflies were never still while I was taking the photos. The first two photos are taken at shutter speeds of 1/3200 of a second, which is about what I needed to get a still shot of their extremely fast moving wings.  I love that you can see the fluoro yellow spots on their wings, something you can't see when they are flying past.
The second set of shots were taken at 1/250 second and you can see the blur of their wings and the gold flecks.

This last shot gives a great view of the butterflies eyes, antennae and the hairs on his body.

Friday, February 8, 2013

Favourite Photo Friday - 8/2/13

I have been very slack with the blogging this week. Anto is working on some new templates for the blog layout and in the meantime it seems a bit broken. Hopefully I will get some new pretty looking posts up next week.

 In the meantime here is the photo for this Friday. This was taken a couple of weeks back in the paddock where we take the alpacas to eat after their walk. I have a whole series of these shots of Astrid I will post, but this one is pretty cute. She was actually chasing a fly that kept buzzing around her face......... or maybe it was me constantly taking photos of her that was causing that reaction?

Photo details:
D7000 with Nikkor 50mm f1.8
ISO 160, focal length 50mm
Exposure: 1/3200 @ f3.2

Friday, February 1, 2013

Favourite Photo Friday - 1/2

This is a photo from this week. I realised I hadn't taken any photos of Scully recently, I'm generally too busy photographing a certain young lady!

Scully was lazing about upstairs in the media room, where it was fairly dark. I also had my 90mm lens on the camera so I needed to bump the ISO quite high. I'm loving the fact that the new camera does a much better job at higher ISOs. On my D80 this would be very noisy at 1600 ISO. No noise reduction was needed here at all and it's fairly noise free unless you go pixel peeping.

For once Scully was actually happy to have her photo taken, so long as I didn't mind providing pats in between shots!


Photo details:
D7000 with Tamron 90mm f2.8
ISO 1600, focal length 90mm
Exposure: 1/400 @ f4.5