
Originally Posted by
Tringa
Glenn, I think the first one is a very good shot of a bird that is difficult to get right. It is so easy to blow the highlights but you have good detail in a lot of the feathers and you have captured a good pose, even though that wasn't the swan's intention.
A few suggestions
- clone out the coot in the background. Have to admit that I find cloning water difficult to get right, the eye seems to spot irregularities in water very easily
- rotate it a little to get the far shore of the lake horizontal. Generally having something cutting through the subject, as the shore line does, is not a good idea, but in this case I don't think it matters. The shore is distant and out of focus and the eye is definitely drawn to the swan.
- have a play with the brightness curve in Photoshop to reduce the brightness of the highlights a little. I think it would get a little more detail in the whitest of the feathers and perhaps boost the saturation a little, and
- a bit of sharpening
On the second - I agree the branch through the tail is not good, but that is what happens sometimes. The EXIF data shows this was at 55mm so I assume, given the size of the bird in the photo, the crop you did was quite heavy and cropping has an effect on quality.
Getting closer to the subject, which could involve a tripod and remote shutter release; or a longer lens will reduce the need for cropping.
To get rid of distracting background you could set up a feeder in a position well away from other trees or shrubs. If you want a more natural look, drill a few holes in a dead branch and pack them with peanuts/ seeds or suet. Fix this somewhere convenient and the birds will find it.
Dave