On 10/31/2013 15:37, Stan Halpin wrote:

On Oct 31, 2013, at 2:09 PM, Ann Sanfedele wrote:

Achoo..
but I had to add a couple of cents..

On Oct 30, 2013, at 7:31 PM, Stan Halpin wrote:


While "seriously" shooting, sometimes fast changing conditions call for fast
reactions and many shots in a short period. But dozens or hundreds of poorly 
framed,
poorly exposed shots aren't going to be helpful in either situation. Quality is 
key.

stan

The thing that matters really is your ability to tell the difference after your 
get home, upload the shots and edit. doesn't matter how much
crap you have on the card as long as you know it is and don't show it to anyone 
else.

I loved the comment someone made a while back about how many photos he had of a 
piece of blue sky where a humming bird had been :-)

ann


I mostly agree with you Ann, but I like Paul's example of his heron shot.

Rather than just looking at the bird and firing away until the buffer was full of

 (out of focus?) images, he anticipated where the bird was going,

and took his in-focus shot when the bird got into the right position.

stan

I don't think what I said contradicts that, actually. I was just saying don't beat yourself up over the misses that no one is going to see but you

ann

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