Photo Crit/Essay: Safari
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- This topic has 12 replies, 7 voices, and was last updated Oct 3, 2007 at 12:31 pm by
Richard Bernabe.
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Sep 22, 2007 at 3:02 pm #7390
Eric DeWitt
MemberHey guys, i posted these images inside another post up in the fly fishing section, but wanted to get the up here to get a bit more feedback from the other photogs here.
Sep 24, 2007 at 8:14 pm #61912Carter Simcoe
MemberWell you’re better than me so I’m not going to offer anything critical but I’ll add that the composition on this one is great.
Sep 24, 2007 at 11:09 pm #61913
David AndersonMemberAll very nice Eric, I like the mix of detail & situations shots.
My favorite is the kids at the end because it’s a strong portrait of the one child in front but by going a bit wider and getting a bit of the other kids in you’ve given it greater depth.
(nice post prod. as well)Are these shot for a magazine ?
www.dsaphoto.com
A picture is thousand words that takes less than a second while a thousand words is a picture that takes a month.
Sep 26, 2007 at 2:48 pm #61914
Ben CochranMemberI really like #3, might of cropped it slightly different but I really like the feel from this image.. Also like 9 and 10 a lot and think that they make for very good stock photography as well. Seems that you had a great time over there. Thanks for sharing and I really enjoyed your images! 🙂
Sep 26, 2007 at 4:27 pm #61915Don Thompson
MemberAll very nice. I also checked out the link to the others. One of my favorites was the one of the two giraffes, but I think I would have cropped the tree coming into the left hand side of the picture.
Sep 30, 2007 at 6:35 pm #61916Richard Bernabe
MemberAside from the sickening feeling in my stomach seeing these beautiful animals killed, the photography is well done.
Oct 1, 2007 at 2:37 pm #61917Anonymous
InactiveI really like #3 as well.
Oct 1, 2007 at 5:03 pm #61918Don Thompson
MemberWhile I personally do not hunt animals of any kind, I believe that as long as I eat meat, and I do, I cannot criticize any who does, as long as it is done legally. I assume that this is the case here or Eric wouldn’t be posting pictures of an illegal activity.
Edited by Don Thompson to add the following
Many would say that a fish is too beautiful to kill and eat, but I am sure many here do that, myself included.
Oct 1, 2007 at 5:48 pm #61919Anonymous
InactiveWhile I personally do not hunt animals of any kind, I believe that as long as I eat meat, and I do, I cannot criticize any who does, as long as it is done legally. I assume that this is the case here or Eric wouldn’t be posting pictures of an illegal activity.
Edited by Don Thompson to add the following
Many would say that a fish is too beautiful to kill and eat, but I am sure many here do that, myself included.
Completely agree.
Oct 1, 2007 at 6:12 pm #61920Carter Simcoe
MemberAs stated in the other thread the money and manpower put on the ground from these hunts is why the herds haven’t been completely destroyed by the poachers already.
Oct 2, 2007 at 7:51 pm #61921Eric DeWitt
MemberThanks for the insight guys, i too would have like to crop some of the shots a bit differently. Â The problem is that the vehicle would come to a stop, and you kinda would get what you get. Â You try and stop at a good place, or creep forward, but most of the time the animals wouldn’t stick around long enough, or there wasn’t another shot that was more open. Â I guess that is the reality of shooting wildlife, and makes me respect the guys that do this stuff for a living even more – it has to be really tough to fill a book with good shots. Â Maybe in a national park where the animals are more tolerant of vehicles, it would be easier?
Carter, the ones with the sun in the background was a combination of lucky timing with the sunrise, and a few trial and errors to get the exposure right. Â I think i ended up with the flash set at 0 EV, and the camera (background) -1 or more. Â If i would have left the camera at 0, it would have been blown out for sure. Â On most of those, i did a few test shots, got it how i wanted, then had to hand the camera off for the final shot.
The kids were fun to shoot, but quite shy, and i was almost out of my candy supply by the time we stopped by this village, so i was having a hard time keeping them in range, haha.
These weren’t shot for a specific magazine, but i may submit them to a few and see if they go somewhere when i have a spare moment or two.
Richard and Seafood, i’m not here to start any arguments and everybody is entitled to their opinions, but i do find it mildly hypocritical and a bit disappointing that guys who support the sport of fishing, where fish die for sport – and i don’t care what people say, even the best catch and release guys still kill a percentage of the fish they release – but don’t support ethical and legal hunting? Â Guys, we would all be better off if fishermen/hunters/outdoorsmen stuck together on these kinds of issues because the activist groups don’t care which one they take away as long as they are taking something away. Â
There was a good discusion about these types of issues in this thread:
http://www.itinerantangler.com/cgi-bin/yabb2/YaBB.pl?num=1188512381
Feel free to read about how our hunting was conducted, and how hunting these animals actually helps support and protect them from overharvest, poaching, etc.
Oct 2, 2007 at 8:04 pm #61922Anonymous
InactiveThanks for the follow up Eric.
Oct 3, 2007 at 12:31 pm #61923Richard Bernabe
MemberRichard and Seafood, i’m not here to start any arguments and everybody is entitled to their opinions, but i do find it mildly hypocritical and a bit disappointing that guys who support the sport of fishing, where fish die for sport – and i don’t care what people say, even the best catch and release guys still kill a percentage of the fish they release – but don’t support ethical and legal hunting?
But you did post these images and asked for our opinion. I gave an honest answer. The photography is well-done, but the subject matter turned me off. By all means, don’t take it personally.
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