05/06/2015
An Osprey (also known as a fish hawk or river hawk) is seen here plucking a fish off the surface of a saltwater lake in Uran, Navi Mumbai.
This is a composite of 4 photos, shot in burst mode and added together using Photoshop. My camera shoots at 8 frames per second, so these 4 photos were all taken in the span of half a second.
It's been one of my photographic dreams to take this kind of a burst shot showing the decisive moments of action by a bird of prey.
I shot these photos in burst mode using my Canon 100-400L lens on a Canon 7D body.
Then I opened the first image (the leftmost photo of the osprey) in Photoshop and tweaked the RAW to my liking by changing contrast, saturation, black level etc.
I opened the other 3 images and made sure that the EXACT SAME settings are applied to them as well. If the exact settings are not applied to all the images, the osprey will look different from shot to shot.
Then I zoomed the second osprey image to 200% and carefully selected the bird. This takes a lot of time and there's really no way around this. After that, I selected the border of the bird and gave it a small dose of Gaussian blur. If the border of your selection is too sharp, it looks weird when you paste it in another image.
I pasted the bird as a layer onto the first image and dragged the second osprey around till it looked right.
I followed the same steps for images 3 and 4.
Then I set to work on the final image containing all the 4 osprey photos. I used a combination of cloning, dodging, burning and spot healing in areas of the selections which did not look right. There is no secret here, just edit till it looks "right". I applied selective sharpening to the ospreys and selective noise reduction to the background.Then I resized the image to display size.