Beautiful work, Mike. Thanks for the building instructions. Most of my work is done on or back porch now. I built a bird sanctuary and feeder there and I use a few potted plants at different times of the year and switch to fall leaves and grasses in the latter part of the year. I have a nice Japanese maple that makes a perfect red or yellow background in Oct and Nov. I have a crock water dish that the bird use but It isn't large enough for reflections. My camera is full frame and I use my 80-400mm most of the time for jays and cardinals, etc. Hummingbirds and small birds I usually use my 500mm. I can no longer get out during the bird migrations but I get ore beautiful shots here on the back porch although there isn't as much variety. I have been saving a large sheet of black glass to use in the bottom of a reflecting pool but I think I'm past that now and I'll probably never use it. Pity, I believe it would hav beautiful when used the right way.
These reflection pools present unique oportunity to take reflection shots. However I always find them very unnatural. Uncanny even. Water pools by nature's design are always situated at the lowest points. Clearly visible edge of the land close behind the edge of the water followed by distant defocused background immidiately gives out that this is some artificially elevated platform. One would have to design some oblique plane extending smoothly from the edge of the pool to make it look like a natural reservoir.
Great video Mike. I do like these sort of videos where you show what you have constructed at your hide. I think the back of my reflection pool needs altering. I have it too high.
I have a small concrete pond on the edge of my terrace and it's always beautiful photos of birds snorting in water against the green background of the garden in bokeh. Nice
As usual a very helpful video - thanks Mike. I have a similar set up and like you I became obsessed with the appearance of the far edge and especially the background because you don't want the set up to look like the pool is suspended in mid air. For the edge of the pool I triesd smearing some waterproof glue and then rubbing soil into it... it seems to have worked well over 12 months.
@MikeLaneFRPS Thanks for the reply Mike, I like to go out in nature once a week, I now tend to put the 12-45 on and do landscape or big Lens and do video if the lights bad.
Great video Mike the main take away for me from this video is keeping the edge of the reflection pool as flat as possible. When a Sparrowhawk visited my Garden a few years back I wish I had had a set up like this . Pond liner and edge are not the look I was going for 😢
Smashing video Mike. Two questions if I may; couldn’t you just place the table a bit further away so you could use your favourite 15-400 lens? Why does the table have to be so big when you’re only photographing the far end? Many thanks.
The table has been in place for over a year and is very heavy. Takes a lot of moving and getting level. I don't have a problem with the 100-400mm and I am happy to use it. The table needs to be longer than it is to get a full reflection. In some of the verticla shots the near end of the table is in the shot at the bottom of the pictures. The bigger the bird the bigger the problem.
Great Mike as usual. I always had a love hate relationship with the 100-400 (I owned two copies over the years). The stabilisation was never consistent and I never figured out truly if it was better switching lens IS off and using the OM-1 inbuilt IBIS, or relying on the lens IS on it’s own. If only Olympus had made this lens with sync IS like the 150-400 or 300 F4 Pro then I’m sure it would have been a keeper.
So f-stop I would guess. Going to watch now out of interest. I don’t shoot MFT but for what it is worth, I use an EF 100-400 L is ii which is F5.6 at 400. And I also have a big old EF 500mm F4 L is. The 500 is technically more demanding. You have a long beast and it is heavy. It is more challenging to get crisp shots with. The zoom has much more modern image stabilisation (is) and it is shorter and lighter. The bokeh is better on the big lens. But there is not much in it. I find I use the 500 in low light and when I can use a support. But 90% of the time, it is the zoom. No difference in IQ between the two. On my R7, I can also use a speedbooster. MFT have these too. That makes my 500 into a 350mm F2.8! Gives me 550mm equivalent. Awesome!
Really interesting video and I am fully in agreement about the logs or stones, just wish I had a garden, though lucky to have the Lake District as my back garden and the irish sea as front garden. You said you get grey squirrels I hope have them euthanised, i find it hypocritical how some photographers come to the lakes to photograph our reds that we fight to support, yet accept greys ….. sorry a rant
Now watched it. So zoom range. OK! Nice info about the pool. Thanks!
Another super breakfast time watch. Lovely video and lovely images.
Thanks.
Funnily enough I can also sit and wait for ages, I find it relaxing actually, and when something does pop up you're onto it. Nice setup Mike !!!
Glad you enjoy it!
Thank you for your good work! I really enjoyed the images. The 100-400 is my go-to lens for birds in the wild. The flexibility is so helpful.
Thanks.
Fantastic as always Mike, thanks for making this 👍
Thank you.
Beautiful work, Mike. Thanks for the building instructions. Most of my work is done on or back porch now. I built a bird sanctuary and feeder there and I use a few potted plants at different times of the year and switch to fall leaves and grasses in the latter part of the year. I have a nice Japanese maple that makes a perfect red or yellow background in Oct and Nov. I have a crock water dish that the bird use but It isn't large enough for reflections. My camera is full frame and I use my 80-400mm most of the time for jays and cardinals, etc. Hummingbirds and small birds I usually use my 500mm. I can no longer get out during the bird migrations but I get ore beautiful shots here on the back porch although there isn't as much variety. I have been saving a large sheet of black glass to use in the bottom of a reflecting pool but I think I'm past that now and I'll probably never use it. Pity, I believe it would hav beautiful when used the right way.
Thank you. Glad you are keeping active.
so chill so cool. keep up mike
Thanks
Excellent work mike and some really beautiful shots.
Many tahnks.
Thanks for a great video and your shots show just how sharp the 100-400 is I am getting one next February for my birthday
Good choice!
Always a pleasure to watch your videos ,Mike.
Thanks.
Great video
Thanks!
Awesome video and great pics, as your usual! And now I've got a new project to work on - thanks for the details on how to build it.
Good luck.
Another good video Mike need to get one off these built myself.
Thanks.
Beautiful images Mike. The grass works so well.
Thanks. Fresh young grass adds just the right colour.
These reflection pools present unique oportunity to take reflection shots. However I always find them very unnatural. Uncanny even. Water pools by nature's design are always situated at the lowest points. Clearly visible edge of the land close behind the edge of the water followed by distant defocused background immidiately gives out that this is some artificially elevated platform. One would have to design some oblique plane extending smoothly from the edge of the pool to make it look like a natural reservoir.
I enjoyed that video, Mike. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you.
Super Mike
Thanks
Nice pictures. Thanks for sharing.
Welcome.
Great video Mike, I think I'm going to have a go at building one myself.
Plan the rear end first.
Great video Mike. I do like these sort of videos where you show what you have constructed at your hide. I think the back of my reflection pool needs altering. I have it too high.
Very hard to get the rear end right, but you are the right man to do it.
Excellent pictures!
Thanks.
I have a small concrete pond on the edge of my terrace and it's always beautiful photos of birds snorting in water against the green background of the garden in bokeh. Nice
Thanks.
Lovely video, thanks!
Thanks.
As usual a very helpful video - thanks Mike. I have a similar set up and like you I became obsessed with the appearance of the far edge and especially the background because you don't want the set up to look like the pool is suspended in mid air. For the edge of the pool I triesd smearing some waterproof glue and then rubbing soil into it... it seems to have worked well over 12 months.
Did similar with clay and soil mixed together.
Lovely Video Mike, and using the lens that I have , makes me feel confident in my gear as I often struggle.
Being fussy about light is the most important thing in photography. Light not right I don't bother.
@MikeLaneFRPS
Thanks for the reply Mike, I like to go out in nature once a week, I now tend to put the 12-45 on and do landscape or big Lens and do video if the lights bad.
❤❤❤❤❤Very nice pictures👍👍👍👍👍👍
Thank you.
The grass? growth at the end of the pool works a treat great set up
Thank you.
Looks so much better (more natural) without logs.
I agree.
Great video Mike the main take away for me from this video is keeping the edge of the reflection pool as flat as possible. When a Sparrowhawk visited my Garden a few years back I wish I had had a set up like this . Pond liner and edge are not the look I was going for 😢
Sparrowhawk has bathed in this pool, but not often.
Thanks 🙏
Welcome.
Another video with great content, 7.00am viewing would be better for me :-) Thanks
Okay Edward. 7am every Sunday it will be loaded for you. There is a logical reason for 8am. Next time we meet I will expain.
Smashing video Mike. Two questions if I may; couldn’t you just place the table a bit further away so you could use your favourite 15-400 lens? Why does the table have to be so big when you’re only photographing the far end? Many thanks.
The table has been in place for over a year and is very heavy. Takes a lot of moving and getting level. I don't have a problem with the 100-400mm and I am happy to use it.
The table needs to be longer than it is to get a full reflection. In some of the verticla shots the near end of the table is in the shot at the bottom of the pictures. The bigger the bird the bigger the problem.
Very interesting video Mike! What focal length did you use for the smallest birds?
It would be 400mm or close.
@@MikeLaneFRPS Thank you!
Great Mike as usual. I always had a love hate relationship with the 100-400 (I owned two copies over the years). The stabilisation was never consistent and I never figured out truly if it was better switching lens IS off and using the OM-1 inbuilt IBIS, or relying on the lens IS on it’s own. If only Olympus had made this lens with sync IS like the 150-400 or 300 F4 Pro then I’m sure it would have been a keeper.
Thanks.
Fantastic.
Can you please share the mode (Manual, shutter priority), aperture, iso for the photos you shared here in this video? Thanks.
Я пользуюсь ручным режимом с автоматическим выбором ISO.
I shoot in Aperture priority and they were all 1600 iso.
Have you considered using the 40-150 f2.8? I would have thought that would be a good option and with the faster aperture.
For the small birds it would not be long enough.
So f-stop I would guess. Going to watch now out of interest. I don’t shoot MFT but for what it is worth, I use an EF 100-400 L is ii which is F5.6 at 400. And I also have a big old EF 500mm F4 L is. The 500 is technically more demanding. You have a long beast and it is heavy. It is more challenging to get crisp shots with. The zoom has much more modern image stabilisation (is) and it is shorter and lighter. The bokeh is better on the big lens. But there is not much in it. I find I use the 500 in low light and when I can use a support. But 90% of the time, it is the zoom. No difference in IQ between the two. On my R7, I can also use a speedbooster. MFT have these too. That makes my 500 into a 350mm F2.8! Gives me 550mm equivalent. Awesome!
Really interesting video and I am fully in agreement about the logs or stones, just wish I had a garden, though lucky to have the Lake District as my back garden and the irish sea as front garden. You said you get grey squirrels I hope have them euthanised, i find it hypocritical how some photographers come to the lakes to photograph our reds that we fight to support, yet accept greys ….. sorry a rant