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(More customer reviews)Bird watchers and bird photographers know that the hardest view of their subjects to catch is when they are in flight. That is why this book of bird flight pictures is so amazing. I suspect that Ettlinger had to find six co-photographers because no smaller group could come up with enough pictures to make up a book.
The book begins with pictures of raptors: hawks, eagles, owls. It's particularly awesome to see these birds with fish, rabbits, mice or insects in their talons. Next are pictures from the shore, including shorebirds, gulls, terns, puffins and a few waders. These are followed by wetlands pictures including more waders and ducks. The book finishes up with a few pictures of songbirds, mostly swallows. The pictures are from North America, Europe, Asia and Australia.
These pictures are amazingly sharp, given that their subjects were moving rapidly. All of the pictures are tributes to the skills of the seven photographers. The majority of pictures are of the raptors, probably due to the fact that they are usually larger birds with less angular motion required to keep them large and framed. The number of songbirds is disappointingly small.
I would love to have any of these pictures hanging on my wall. All of the pictures are closely cropped, so that the birds seem ready to burst out of the frame. And that's also the rub in part. A book is a work of art in its own right and as such relies upon both repetition and variation. It needs a rhythm and the one here is repetitious, so that after a dozen or so pictures, the images started to blend together. To make sure of myself I looked at the work of another bird photographer, "Birds of Prey in the American West" by Tom Vezo. His pictures of raptors in flight were some times closely cropped, but on other occasions were pulled back to give the birds a little more blue sky to fly into, or showed the bird flying in an environment, like a field. And the paucity of passerines sent me back to a work of one of the all-time world-class photographers, "Vanishing Songbirds: The Sixth Order : Wood Warblers and Other Passerine Birds ("Constance Sullivan Book)" by Eliot Porter. It's time for somebody in the digital age to duplicate Porter's achievement.
Like most collections of photographs, the text of the book seemed like one of those requirements that after one reading (or for some self-explanatory images, no reading) could be ignored. And I was disappointed to find there was absolutely no reference to technique, even as an appendix. Perhaps the authors wanted to keep their secrets from the envious eyes of other photographers.
Yet even though I have quibbles, I'm certain no bird watcher or bird photographer will feel disappointed when they read this book.
Click Here to see more reviews about: On Feathered Wings: Birds in Flight
When we imagine birds, we think of them soaring through the sky, high above our heads-yet photographs of birds in the air are surprisingly rare. On Feathered Wings features the work of seven photographers who have spent their lives camping out, donning waders, and lying in wait for the greatest shots of birds doing what they do best: flying! Selected by birder and photographer Richard Ettlinger, these gorgeous, often thrilling images show hunters, migrators, waterfowl, and songbirds living on the wing: hunting, feeding, fighting, traveling, or just gliding along. An essay by Ettlinger gives an overview of the mechanics and evolution of bird flight. From falcons and eagles to swallows and hummingbirds, On Feathered Wings serves up a rich collection of images that is sure to delight birders both novice and veteran, and anyone who has ever looked to the skies in wonder.
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