A tired wild red fox (Vulpes vulpes).
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Awards
Contest Finalist in Wildlife Friends Photo Contest
Contest Finalist in My Best Capture Photo Contest vol2
Contest Finalist in Picturing Other Species Photo Contest
Contest Finalist in Animals Around Us Photo Contest
Runner Up in Celebrating Earth Day Photo Contest 2019
Contest Finalist in Celebrating Earth Day Photo Contest 2019
Contest Finalist in Monthly Pro Photo Contest Vol 48
Contest Finalist in Covers Photo Contest Volume 1
Top Shot Award
Contest Finalist in Covers Photo Contest Vol 51
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Beautiful-Breeze
January 24, 2019
FABULIOUS! I love his/her wiskers. It really makes me smile. Nothing like a good yawn and stretch first thing in the morning. :-)
Thaddeus
March 31, 2019
Beautiful shot. I’d love to know where you were to get this, and how you stayed out of sight. 😊
HenrikSpranz
May 13, 2019
Thank you - glad you know it. The foxes there are wild but somewhat used to people. To see them that relaxed you need a lot of patience though.
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Behind The Lens
Location
I've took this photo near a beach in Southern Europe.Time
As I'm always trying to get a decent light I mostly use the light in the very early morning or late afternoon and around sunset. Here I could use the already getting softer light shining trough the trees and bushes for this soft bokeh.Lighting
I always love to play with the available light and here it was possible to get a shot of this pretty fox against the light so its silhouette getting accentuated.Equipment
This shot was taken with a Canon 5d Mk iii, and a Sigma Sports AF 120-300mm 2.8 DG HSM OS and a bean bag.Inspiration
Most of the time I want to achieve a fairytale-like impression in my photos and having a nice bokeh like here contributes a lot. To get this impression I don't use filters or 'photoshopping' - I use light, an open aperture, a fast lens and a very low pov. I'm trying to get my shots against a background which contributes to the bokeh. You can't always control this but I just don't' shoot where I won't get the results I want to have or I won't show the results here.Editing
I always do some base processing in Lightroom as I always shoot in RAW format. I adjust the white balance there, equalize the histogram a little, do lens corrections and crop the photo. Exported to Photoshop I use the tonal correction, sometimes some dodge&burn techniques, probably do some minor adjustments like sharpening or increasing saturation but I always try to avoid retouching my photos and they are *no* composites or somehow put together. Here I've did a little retouching in the foreground too to remove a few disturbing parts.In my camera bag
Canon EOS R5, Canon RF 14-35/4 L IS, Sigma 85/1.4 Art, Sigma 180/2.8 macro, Sigma 120-300/2.8 Sports, Canon 400/2.8 L IS USM, bean bag, Sirui and Berlebach tripods, reflectors and diffusors, gradient filters, polarization filterFeedback
In nature photography - especially when doing wild life shots - you need patience, but you need to be on guard to use situations like this for a photo. Practice using your tele lenses in fast action situations. But besides the technical aspects it's good to have an idea or concept of what to get, which light situations you want to achieve and this plays a major role in choosing the place to shoot from. Having a low pov can help so much too to get a blurry foreground like here in this photo.