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General Photography
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Post your Birds in Flight
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<blockquote data-quote="grandpaw" data-source="post: 137894" data-attributes="member: 8635"><p><strong>Re: Bird in Flight</strong></p><p></p><p>I like BIF shots and am always trying to get better shots every time I go shooting. What I do is every time I go out, no matter what kind of bird it is or which direction it is flying I try and take a picture of it even if I know it won't be any good just to get the practice of getting my single point of focus in the right place. I have see a lot of peoople wait until it is the bird they want and that it is flying in the right direction to start taking shots. This only gets you a bunch of bad shots of the images you really want. Why not practice getting your focus point in the right place on a subject that really doesn't matter to you instead of wasting your learning on the subject that do mean something to you. When you get home and look through the images it costs you nothing to delete them and you get in a lot of valuable practice.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="grandpaw, post: 137894, member: 8635"] [b]Re: Bird in Flight[/b] I like BIF shots and am always trying to get better shots every time I go shooting. What I do is every time I go out, no matter what kind of bird it is or which direction it is flying I try and take a picture of it even if I know it won't be any good just to get the practice of getting my single point of focus in the right place. I have see a lot of peoople wait until it is the bird they want and that it is flying in the right direction to start taking shots. This only gets you a bunch of bad shots of the images you really want. Why not practice getting your focus point in the right place on a subject that really doesn't matter to you instead of wasting your learning on the subject that do mean something to you. When you get home and look through the images it costs you nothing to delete them and you get in a lot of valuable practice. [/QUOTE]
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