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by Prager on 31 October 2009 - 21:10
Here is another dog from them:
http://www.pedigreedatabase.com/gsd/classifieds/88779.html
Now this should be same dog :.jpg)
as this dog(?!)?
Look between the ears of the upper dog. It is purple?
This is either different dog (Should not be), or someone has bad camera, or something fishy is going on here?
Prager(Hans)
http://www.pedigreedatabase.com/gsd/classifieds/88779.html
Now this should be same dog :
.jpg)
as this dog(?!)?

Look between the ears of the upper dog. It is purple?
This is either different dog (Should not be), or someone has bad camera, or something fishy is going on here?
Prager(Hans)

by Liesjers on 31 October 2009 - 23:10
Not sure about the dogs in this thread, not familiar with them, but just wanted to say that photographing a dog can be tricky, especially if we are being super picky about colors. I'll use my own dog as an example. He is a very rich red and black dog (no bitch stripe).
Used aperture priority in harsh sunlight. This is how it came out, if anything I probably DE-saturated a little bit, and the dog still looks oompaloompa orange!

Used aperture priority in harsh sunlight. This is how it came out, if anything I probably DE-saturated a little bit, and the dog still looks oompaloompa orange!

Outdoors, camera on AUTO (notoriously washed out and blue-ish) in poor light
Outdoors in the sunlight on the Sport setting
Outdoors with no direct sunlight (mid-day, but cloud cover) on the Sport setting
In my experience, I get the most accurate color/saturation as far as my dog's color when I am using an indoor flash pointed at my (white) ceiling, or using aperture priority outdoors, but not with direct, bright sunlight
All the same dog, all the same camera....so which is right? Just goes to show...don't judge a dog based on a single photograph.
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