A goldfinch hanging around
First shot on the roll
Flicker feeding
Another shot of that song sparrow
Wally the Wasp
Sunday morning sish ice breaking up
This morning's breakfast visitor
Morning moon three days ago
How grainy can it get?
Hardly grainy at all by comparison
Gerard asking me about my work in the 1980s
Jeremy stopping by
Virginia coming up to 88
Cool but expecting better weather
Snowbird
Bad Negative Appreciation
Even in August . . .
Windy rain turning to snow
In the hay
River Thames on a dull day in October 1985
Appreciating the Mona Lisa
Ice in the harbour
Regina at 90
E and her new puppy
Jeff
March 1999
Siskin eating his sunflower seed
Dins
Pine siskins eating and squabbling
He was Peej then; he's Patty now. Or Patrick.
Will at one
Goldfinch at the sunflower seeds
Cat, box, bottle of Dock. . .
M in my office
Another shot from the decade-old film
K's visit
The beer I was drinking
The beer I was drinking
Snow getting lit
Wedding plans
Starling channelling his inner '80s pop-star
The local hawk hanging out
Snowbirds at work
Lazy Saturday morning
Hairy woodpecker at his breakfast
See also...
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
101 visits
This morning's visitor


While I ate my breakfast this morning, this song sparrow was hanging
around outside my window. The blue colour on the top of his beak is
probably just reflection from the sunlit back wall of my house. You
can also see a junco's tail hanging from the other side of the
feeder.
I had at hand my oldest digital camera, the Olympus E-P2, with its
extremely compact Tokina 300mm "Reflex" lens. This about 50%
of the original frame.
This lens gets in close but is very soft. Pictures
taken with it always need a lot of contrast adjustment, which is what
this got before I posted it. I think I over-sharpened it, too; don't look
too closely.
around outside my window. The blue colour on the top of his beak is
probably just reflection from the sunlit back wall of my house. You
can also see a junco's tail hanging from the other side of the
feeder.
I had at hand my oldest digital camera, the Olympus E-P2, with its
extremely compact Tokina 300mm "Reflex" lens. This about 50%
of the original frame.
This lens gets in close but is very soft. Pictures
taken with it always need a lot of contrast adjustment, which is what
this got before I posted it. I think I over-sharpened it, too; don't look
too closely.
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.