Fungi are always worth photographing - but not easy to do. Look for specimins that are not damaged and maybe single out one fungi so that you can get it all in focus. Good effort though.
Don't do what an ex-club member I know admitted to doing once, he took his pics then destroyed them so no-one else coult take any shots!! Unbelievable but true.
I was there when that club member did that. I was speechless. They've recently left the club.
Good angle and nice try on this. I would also watch the background carefully to avoid things like that light coloured blade of grass or something rising diagonally behind the middle mushroom.
I can't believe the other comments I'm reading here about someone destroying things after they got their photo - astonishing!
It certainly isn't acceptable in terms of wildlife photography where 'the subject's welfare always comes first'. It's not really acceptable at all.
Comments
Fungi are always worth photographing - but not easy to do. Look for specimins that are not damaged and maybe single out one fungi so that you can get it all in focus. Good effort though.
Don't do what an ex-club member I know admitted to doing once, he took his pics then destroyed them so no-one else coult take any shots!! Unbelievable but true.
I was there when that club member did that. I was speechless. They've recently left the club.
Good angle and nice try on this. I would also watch the background carefully to avoid things like that light coloured blade of grass or something rising diagonally behind the middle mushroom.
I can't believe the other comments I'm reading here about someone destroying things after they got their photo - astonishing!
It certainly isn't acceptable in terms of wildlife photography where 'the subject's welfare always comes first'. It's not really acceptable at all.
absolutely agree
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