blp shabash 430x45
Inspiring and Supporting Photographers of Australian Birds

A Special Interest Group of BirdLife Australia        Follow us! IG Glyph Fill  flogo RGB HEX 29      Join Us

  • Australian Wood Duck (Image ID 48904)

    Australian Wood Duck.   Photographer: Rob Solic

  • Eastern Spinebill (Image ID 43166)

    Eastern Spinebill.   Photographer: Rob Solic

  • Osprey (Image ID 45807)

    Osprey.   Photographer: Rob Solic

  • Mistletoebird (Image ID 43639)

    Mistletoebird.   Photographer: Rob Solic

  • Singing Honeyeater (Image ID 26277)

    Singing Honeyeater.   Photographer: Sandy Castle

BLP Member Login

Premier Bird Images

New Images

Creative Images

Critique Gallery

Website Upgrade

This website will be off-line from midnight Sunday/Monday 29th April


We will be installing a major upgrade to the website software.
We anticipate that this will take most of Monday to complete and test;
the site should be available for members and guests by Tuesday 30th April.

Following the upgrade, please report any problems to [email protected]

This Search facility will search all website content, uploaded documents, and images.  Some content on this site is restricted to BLP members; visitors may not be able to access all the items found.  The search options button on the All Photos page (on the Photo Gallery drop-down menu), and on individual gallery pages, provides more options for searching images only.

Latest Images

Pied Heron (Image ID 62794)
Pied Heron
Phillip Leahy
Viewed: 7
Little Friarbird (Image ID 62793)
Little Friarbird
Phillip Leahy
Viewed: 9
Ruddy Turnstone (Image ID 62792)
Ruddy Turnstone
Con Duyvestyn
Viewed: 8
Brown Booby (Image ID 62791)
Brown Booby
Gary King
Viewed: 14
Mangrove Honeyeater (Image ID 62790)
Mangrove Honeyeater
Patrick Booth
Viewed: 11
Pink Robin (Image ID 62789)
Pink Robin
Diana Womersley
Viewed: 14
Tasmanian Native-hen (Image ID 62788)
Tasmanian Native-hen
Diana Womersley
Viewed: 11
Brown Booby (Image ID 62786)
Brown Booby
Gary King
Viewed: 14
Brown Booby (Image ID 62784)
Brown Booby
Gary King
Viewed: 14
Bar-tailed Godwit (Image ID 62782)
Bar-tailed Godwit
Graham Gall
Viewed: 11
Musk Duck (Image ID 62781)
Musk Duck
Michael Hamel-Green
Viewed: 11
Black-shouldered Kite (Image ID 62780)
Black-shouldered Kite
Michael Hamel-Green
Viewed: 9
Rainbow Bee-eater (Image ID 62779)
Rainbow Bee-eater
Kevin Brett
Viewed: 10
Red-winged Fairy-wren (Image ID 62778)
Red-winged Fairy-wren
Glenn Pure
Viewed: 10
Western Rosella (Image ID 62776)
Western Rosella
Glenn Pure
Viewed: 11
Western Rosella (Image ID 62775)
Western Rosella
Glenn Pure
Viewed: 13
Tasmanian Native-hen (Image ID 62773)
Tasmanian Native-hen
Diana Womersley
Viewed: 14
Australasian Grebe (Image ID 62772)
Australasian Grebe
Ian Wilson
Viewed: 18
Australasian Grebe (Image ID 62771)
Australasian Grebe
Ian Wilson
Viewed: 18
Wedge-tailed Eagle (Image ID 62770)
Wedge-tailed Eagle
Michael Piggott
Viewed: 15
Peaceful Dove (Image ID 62769)
Peaceful Dove
Kevin Brett
Viewed: 13
American Golden Plover (V), Pied Stilt (Image ID 62768)
American Golden Plover (V), Pied Stilt
Michael Hamel-Green
Viewed: 10
Pale-headed Rosella (Image ID 62766)
Pale-headed Rosella
Angela Farnsworth
Viewed: 16
Pacific Black Duck (Image ID 62763)
Pacific Black Duck
Angela Farnsworth
Viewed: 12
Pacific Black Duck (Image ID 62762)
Pacific Black Duck
Angela Farnsworth
Viewed: 15
Pacific Black Duck (Image ID 62761)
Pacific Black Duck
Angela Farnsworth
Viewed: 16
Pied Stilt (Image ID 62759)
Pied Stilt
Andrew Keir
Viewed: 13

This is a bumper crop of good quality images and I found making the final choices difficult.

At the Intermediate level photographers should be starting to work beyond studies of a bird standing still or a bird perched on a stick.  Possible initiatives include capturing images of birds engaging in some activity, capturing multiple birds in the same frame, using perches as pictorial props (mosses, lichens, arrangements of leaves and flowers), sensitive management of light and colour, using the natural and human-built environment as important elements in the composition, and/or using innovative camera/lens techniques.  To this end I have given some preference to images where photographers have tried for something fresh and challenging in capture, processing or presentation.

To sort out the 95 images I began by dividing them into three categories:  ‘Yes’, ‘Maybe’ and ‘No’.  As I went through I made notes about the reasons why each image was allocated to a category.  This left me with well over 70 images in the ‘Yes’ and ‘Maybe’ categories.

I then applied the standard technical tests such as exposure and sharpness.  The judging was getting quite hard by this stage because the better images were very even when it came to technical standards.  While doing this, I also checked the comments sections.  I kept those images in the bag that had comments that added to the viewing experience.

I then applied some final tests:  Did the image tell a story?  Did the image have a Wow! factor?  What was the comparative degree of difficulty?  For example, did the photographer reach for something more difficult and complex than a straight portrait of a perched bird?  Was the composition effective?  Finally, did I want to get back to the image for some more viewing enjoyment?

Images were marked down for the following reasons:

  1. Too dark. For some otherwise excellent images, this was my greatest regret in reviewing the images.  It would take very little time moving the light/darkness sliders back and forth to get superior outcomes.  Or perhaps screen calibration would be in order.
  2. Bird plonked in the centre of the image.
  3. No light/colour in the eye.
  4. Over-sharpening: feathers look wiry, light line artefact around the outside contours of the bird.
  5. Saturation/hue cranked up to generate fake colours.
  6. Sticks mismanaged. In a composition which basically includes a bird and some sticks, the sticks can dominate because the eye is drawn to the linear features and tends to follow the sticks around.  This can muck up the response to the bird itself.
  7. Shadow management. There are shadows and shadows.  Dark black shadows on a white bird, large areas of black, and dark shadow lines across a bird should all be avoided unless there is an intent to make use of the shadows.
  8. A bit of obstruction might not matter.  It might even be manipulated successfully to be a constructive part of the composition.  But a lot of obstruction does matter, again unless it is the intent of the photographer in order to improve the composition.
  9. Depth of field not enough to capture all or most of the bird.
  10. Softness, particularly when it is around the head.
  11. Whites blown, blacks an impenetrable black, or the reds fused.
  12. Distracting clutters of vegetation, soil, stones, etc.
  13. Cloning that had left a visible trail.

Many of these shortcomings can readily be turned around and used as a checklist for improve image capture and processing.

 

Winner:  Australasian Gannet, by John Eley (Image ID 33928)

What is truly remarkable about this image is that it succeeds in conveying a delicate sense of touch.  It does this by the way in which the bill of one bird causes an indentation in the neck feathers of the other bird.  Those beaks are powerful enough to absorb enormous impact during the dives as well as to kill fish.

Overall this image shows a wonderful gradation between extra sharp and crisp detail through to softness.  This is particularly appropriate for the content which is an intimate portrait of pair bonding behaviour.  Taking images of birds in a flock is a challenge because of obstruction and the difficulties of dealing with a clutter of bird parts in the depth of field and beyond.  In this case the third beak is a distraction.  On the other hand, the general pattern of whites and golden yellows works well.

Australasian Gannet

Commended:  Australasian Gannet, by Con Duvestyn (Image ID 33894)

This is wonderful flight shot with good levels of crisp detail.  The bird is positioned well in the image so we get the distinct sense that the next move is a plunge downwards and to our right as we view the image.  Minor issues include some small blowout in the white areas.  The comments are a useful addition to our appreciation of the image.

Australasian Gannet

Commended: Whistling Kite, by Adam S Kraska  (Image ID 33951)

Wow! This is a high risk entry.  It has issues with lack of focus and of softness in some areas and with the shadows of the far wing tip.  On the other hand, the closeness to the action, the cropping, the sweeping lines, and the positive and negative spaces of this composition brings us face to face with the sheer power of a raptor.  The half-closed nictitating membrane is one of those small details that can add so much to the overall image.  Some of the soft areas would respond to use of the unsharp mask tool.  So, despite the technical shortcomings this is an image that has great power.  The photographer’s explanation of why he chose to present the image as he has is a useful addition to our understanding of the image.

Whistling Kite

Commended:  Australian Pelican, by Linda Unwin (Image ID 34312)

Bathing images are a challenging sub-genre of bird photography.  The key is that the water will have equal or greater pictorial space than the bird.  The water cannot simply be bokeh.  It has to contribute substantially to the composition.  At the same time, if the bird is completely bedraggled, the image may lose sense and impact.  Another challenge is that water itself can lack form, creating a messy melange.  This image addresses the various challenges well.  In this case the important visual points of the Pelican – the eye and the beak – are crisp.  The mini-waterfalls running from the leading edges of the wings are sharp.  These lines conform well with the lines of the main wing feathers.  Despite lots of action there is sufficient calm water around the bird to provide pleasing shapes in the waves.  The small reflections of colour highlights in the water are pleasing.  The composition is enhanced by the placement of the bird in the frame.  The small area of shadow under the beak does not unduly distract from this image.  The photographer’s comments evince engagement with the bird and help inform the viewer’s response.

Image34312

[Note: this image is no longer available in our galleries.]

Commended: Palm Cockatoo, by Con Duvestyn  (Image ID 33978)

This is a wonderful composition at both the macro and micro levels.  The side-on portrait of this bird generates powerful lines from the repeated curves of the crest which draw the eye to the point of interest.  The angles of the upper and lower mandibles complement this and all these lines are anchored by the angle of the leg which is holding the nut.  At the micro level the red shape of the face moving into the red tongue effortlessly guides the eye to where the action is.  The image is sharp where it needs to be.  The bokeh works except where a small area of white in the bokeh gives undue emphasis to the lower claw.  Overall, the image is rather dark and it would be worth selecting the darker areas and doing some local readjustment. 

Palm Cockatoo

Commended: Red-headed Honeyeater, by Chris Young (Image ID 33853)

Flight shots of small birds in flight are a major challenge.  The composition is a simple triangle with the high point of the triangle occupied by the head and beak.  This dominant position in the shape is emphasized by the dominance of a significant patch of red in the composition.  The result is that the viewer looks where the photographer wants the viewer to look: at the head.  The upwards angle of flight is complemented by blur of the wings.  The bokeh does not distract here.  The photographer’s comments are a useful addition to our appreciation of the image.

 

Red-headed Honeyeater

Commended: Grey Butcherbird, by Catherine Noone (Image ID 34097)

This image has one quality that makes it stand out from the pack: it has an artist’s eye for composition.  All the elements in the picture count, not just the bird.  The key is to see the flat masses.  The general tones of light, colour and shapes of this composition work well together.  This is a refreshing bird image!  The picture tells an important story: increasingly birds must live and survive in human environments.  The photographer’s comment shows someone ready for all opportunities and open to new ways of seeing and representing birds.  The image would benefit from cropping a slice off the right hand side of the image in order to have the bird ‘looking into’ the main space.  The other aim for the cropping would be to balance the mass of the pole with the mass of the bird in the composition.

Grey Butcherbird

Honourable Mention:  Dusky Honeyeater, by Gary King  (Image ID 33560)

Dusky Honeyeaters are such quick movers that there are few high quality images of them in the galleries.  Images of bathing birds are tricky.  The water droplets here convey action.  They have also absorbed the tones of the general colour scheme.  The key parts of the bird are sharp, noting that parts of the bird are out of the depth of field and possibly suffering from blur motion.  The round orange fruit in the background is a small distraction.  All-in-all a good outcome for an image with a high degree of difficulty.

 

Dusky Honeyeater

Honourable Mention:  Red-eared Firetail, by Jane Putland  (Image ID 34259)

This image has three positive elements.  Its perch adds significantly to the composition.  The bokeh does not distract.  And then we have that special little detail that lifts the image – the kangaroo fur.  Some softness of the bird itself might be lifted by use of the unsharp mask tool.  The photographer’s comment shows that the image was planned and executed deliberately for a good outcome. 

Red-eared Firetail

Recent Picks

Purple-crowned Fairy-wren (Image ID 62742)
Purple-crowned Fairy-wren
Peter Scholer
Viewed: 41
Australian Pelican (Image ID 62732)
Australian Pelican
Glenn Pure
Viewed: 58
Musk Duck (Image ID 62723)
Musk Duck
Tim Van Leeuwen
Viewed: 50
Greater Crested Tern (Image ID 62706)
Greater Crested Tern
Glenn Pure
Viewed: 74
Black Kite (Image ID 62629)
Black Kite
Michael Hamel-Green
Viewed: 93
Australian Pelican (Image ID 62556)
Australian Pelican
Angela Farnsworth
Viewed: 103
Restless Flycatcher (Image ID 62487)
Restless Flycatcher
Gary King
Viewed: 170
Whistling Kite (Image ID 62481)
Whistling Kite
Mary Wheeler
Viewed: 154
Flame Robin (Image ID 62440)
Flame Robin
Rob Solic
Viewed: 139
Caspian Tern (Image ID 62438)
Caspian Tern
Patrick Kavanagh
Viewed: 168

CONTACT US

The easiest way to contact us is by emailing us at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

The Our People page, in the About Us section, contains email links to each of the committee members.