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Snowy Owl Dorsal View (Bubo scandiacus, Harfang des neiges, SNOW) from my Winter Snowy Owl Photo Tour in Ontario, Canada.Image Copyright ©Christopher Dodds. Sony Alpha a9 II Mirrorless camera & Sony FE 400 f/2.8 GM OSS. ISO 800, f/2.8 @ 1/5,000s…

Snowy Owl Dorsal View (Bubo scandiacus, Harfang des neiges, SNOW) from my Winter Snowy Owl Photo Tour in Ontario, Canada.Image Copyright ©Christopher Dodds. Sony Alpha a9 II Mirrorless camera & Sony FE 400 f/2.8 GM OSS. ISO 800, f/2.8 @ 1/5,000s Manual exposure. Full Frame.

Snowy Owl Dorsal View

Christopher Dodds November 2, 2020

Q: Hi Chris, I have been told a few times by other photographers that I should throw away any picture that does not include both eyes. Do you follow this rule?

-James Bauer

A: Hi James, Absolutely not! While it is rare for me to keep an image where you can’t see at least one eye, it does happen. The dorsal view of the Snowy Owl here is a good example of when that works. Browse through the images in this blog and you will see many images with just one eye visible to the viewer.

As for what to throw away, once you have deleted any images that are out of focus, or obvious immediate failures, it is up to you what to keep. We all have different tastes and storage is cheap these days. Keep the images that you like - smile!

In Bird Photography Tags Bubo scandiacus, Harfang des neiges, SNOW, snowy owl, Snowy Owl Workshop, Snowy Owl Photo Tour, Ontario, Quebec, Dorsal view, wings, white, snow
← Northern Hawk OwlRaccoon @ 10,000 ISO →

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