deviant art

Deviant Login Shop  Join deviantART for FREE Take the Tour
×

Shop Similar Prints

More from *Morgan-Lou


×

*Morgan-Lou has limited the viewing of this artwork
to members of the deviantART community only.

You can log in or become a member for FREE!

389

49 9 0
...








©2007-2011 *winona-heart
All rights reserved: all material in my gallery may not be reproduced,
copied, edited, published, transmitted or uploaded in any way without my written permission.

Details

Stats

Submitted on
September 14, 2011
Image Size
299 KB
Resolution
800×600
Views
389
Favourites
49 (who?)
Comments
9

Camera Data

Make
OLYMPUS IMAGING CORP.
Model
E-5
Shutter Speed
1/1000 second
Aperture
F/3.5
Focal Length
200 mm
ISO Speed
200
Date Taken
September 12, 2011
Software
Adobe Photoshop CS5 Windows
URL
Thumb
Only verified accounts can report policy violations. Please check your email and click on the verification link.
* Required field
Add a Comment:
 
love 1 1 joy 0 0 wow 0 0 mad 0 0 sad 0 0 fear 0 0 neutral 0 0
:iconakcattykit:
Simple, but lovely!
Reply
:iconmorgan-lou:
*Morgan-Lou Sep 16, 2011  Professional Photographer
Thank you :love:
Reply
:iconakcattykit:
You're welcome! :D
Reply
:iconphoto67:
Mood: Affection =photo67 Sep 15, 2011  Professional Photographer
NICE SHOT...
Reply
:iconmorgan-lou:
*Morgan-Lou Sep 15, 2011  Professional Photographer
Thank you :)
Reply
:iconirrlicht71:
~irrlicht71 Sep 15, 2011  Hobbyist Photographer
I see. "Depth of field" is often a problem in nature photography. Good to see, that it is not impossible to manage it.
Reply
:iconmorgan-lou:
*Morgan-Lou Sep 15, 2011  Professional Photographer
Of course, it depends on your own composition, subject´s background too and what is your main focus... It is all about practice!
Reply
:iconirrlicht71:
~irrlicht71 Sep 15, 2011  Hobbyist Photographer
The background creates the magic! I'd be curious to know how to receive this effect. :ahoy:
Reply
:iconmorgan-lou:
*Morgan-Lou Sep 15, 2011  Professional Photographer
It all depends on your camera settings and the lens you are using!
If you understand how to interpret the exif of an image, you might read mine and get a clue ;)
Reply
Add a Comment: