Brown Hare




Nice take, Steve! :)

I suggest my students to use a fatter ratio when it comes
to cropping… like 3:4 instead of 2:3 with the effect that the
image looks more stable. Here, there is quite enough spa-
ce at the top to successfully apply the new ratio. :cool:
 
Very nice I've not seen that many this year the ones I have seen are always a field away
 
Steve is this as framed,ie no crop if so mate a cracking bit of framing. I find framing to possibly be the hardest part of all this,especially with hares. They change shape so damn fast,ie ,when this guy moves one has to go back to landscape,it's so fast this camera juggling. Oh mate could you pop ya techs up please,still a bit yellow for me but it's a cracking frame

stu
 
Steve is this as framed,ie no crop if so mate a cracking bit of framing. I find framing to possibly be the hardest part of all this,especially with hares. They change shape so damn fast,ie ,when this guy moves one has to go back to landscape,it's so fast this camera juggling. Oh mate could you pop ya techs up please,still a bit yellow for me but it's a cracking frame

stu
Hi Stuart , it is virtually full frame with only a slight bit cropped off the top as there was a bit too much greenery if I had left it.
Canon 1DX with 500mm F4 lens , ISO 1250 , F5.6 , 1/100th sec
 
Cheers mate very much appreciated

thanks muchly

stu
 
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