Monday, January 16, 2012

Beautiful HDR Images

Thanks for visiting! Use the RSS feed or e-mail subscription to keep up to date on what's happening on this site.
Our human eyes can see far more colors than can reproduce any device, whether it is a modern digital photo device or monitor.

In order to cover entire dynamic range in photography , we need a few shots with different exposures, "glued" to the editor, and then we can see the beautiful, detailed cloud around the sun, and items that are in shadow.

This is the HDRI (High Dynamic Range Image) - image with wide dynamic range. Pictures taken using this technique, sometimes surreal, but fantastically beautiful.

Beautiful HDR Photography


Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Funny Facts About Turkeys

Thanks for visiting! Use the RSS feed or e-mail subscription to keep up to date on what's happening on this site.

Here are ten funny facts about turkeys you might not have known.

A turkey's body has between 5000 and 6000 feathers. A female turkey's feathers tend to be brown for concealment (so they can safely stay in the nest with their eggs) while males have more colorful plumage that lets them show off and attract mates. [source]

While wild turkeys thrive in the U.S. today, they were near extinction as recently as the 1930s. [source]

Benjamin Franklin proposed the wild turkey as the national bird of the United States (although the ultimate choice was the bald eagle). [source]

Turkeys are intelligent birds. Not only can they recognize other turkeys by their voices, but they can learn the geography of an area covering more than 1000 acres. [source]

Wild turkeys can fly up to 55 miles per hour, although only for short distances. [source]

Turkeys are also reasonably fast on the ground, able to run up to 25 miles per hour. [source]

The gobble sound a wild turkey makes can be heard from around a mile away. [source]

Like humans, wild turkeys are omnivores, eating both plant-based food like grass and berries as well as insects and even small reptiles. [source]

Only female turkeys care for their young, and that care only lasts briefly. After a few days, the chicks (with 4-17 eggs laid in a short period) learn to feed themselves. [source]

Unlike some animals (like deer), overpopulation is not a problem with wild turkeys. They can live in large groups without doing serious damage to the environment because of their diverse food sources. Because they’ll eat using several plant and animal sources, they don’t deplete any one of them completely as other animal populations might. [source]
Pin It button on image hover