Best in Show Award!

My image Last Flight Out of a male Wood Duck flying over the water of the lake in Sterne Park in Littleton with vivid Fall foliage reflections, has been awarded Best in Show of the Hit Me With Your Best Shot Photography Exhibit at the Gallery by the Lake in Lake Charles, Louisiana. This annual competition is a bird photography-only exhibit with incredible quality entries. If you’d like to see the exhibit online, the link is below. I am very honored and humbled to receive this award! https://gallerybythelake.org/2024-gallery

NANPA Top 250 Showcase Winners!

My images of Last Flight Out (see above) and It Was a Dark and Stormy Night (see below) have just been named to the North American Nature Photographers

Association (NANPA) Top 250 Showcase for 2025. NANPA is recognized for its membership of excellent nature photographers across North America. Every year they select the top 250 nature photographs in various categories. My two images were selected out of 3,200 entries (only 250 are selected) and I am incredibly honored to once again be in the Top 250 for the second year in a row with two photographs. To view all Top 250, click on the link here.

The Top Ten (or so) Photos of 2024

This month blog post is about what I think are my top 10 (or so) photos from 2024. You can read it here.

Right - I saw this American Kestrel fly right over my shoulder and land on this post. Only later did I realize it had the remnants of a meal in its talons.

Right - This Great Blue Heron was actually preening its feathers and seemed to stop to look at me.

Right - Red-Tailed Hawk beginning its takeoff.

New Images

Right - This mated Bald Eagle couple seems to be sharing a bit of local gossip!

Right - Same American Kestrel had just caught an insect and was about to land to enjoy its catch.

Right - The magenta color of the lake at Chatfield was due to an incredible sunset that day. I was taking photos of it when this Great Blue Heron flew in and offered to pose which I obviously took great advantage of.

I continually update this website with new images of birds. This is where I will “introduce” them so that you can have just one place to look until I assign them to one of the galleries. So even if you’ve viewed my entire website many times, you will only need to come back to this page to see what’s new. As always, click any image to enlarge.

Right - Bald Eagle tears into a fish it just caught

Right - Same hawk giving me an intense look!

Below - Northern Shovelers are a type of duck we only see here from late Fall to early Spring. Males especially are colorful with their iridescent heads and wings.

Below - Bald eagles were having a field day recently and it was fun to watch them fish and chase after those that were successful.

Below - I so look forward to Hooded Mergansers returning in the late Fall. THey are so expressive and just seem so happy all the time.

What is Bird Street Photography?

I have been fascinated – okay, obsessed – with photographing birds for a few years now. They are magnificent creatures who are largely unpredictable and a challenge to photograph. As opposed to static landscape and architectural photography (both of which I love to do), bird photography more closely resembles the genre of “street photography” but with trees, bushes, water, and the sky as their very busy streets. Like traditional “street photography”, you may be familiar with the location you go to, but you can never predict what scenes will unfold.

I am based in Littleton, Colorado and almost all of the images on this website are of “locals”, meaning not only did I photograph most of the birds here in Colorado, but the vast majority were photographed in the Littleton area. Some are year-round residents; others are migrants “fleeing” through the state.

Although I photograph a variety of species, I care much less about that than I do about catching a variety of avian activities such as fishing, eating, flying, courting, etc. All photos are completely natural, meaning I do not “stage” any setups by using “baiting” techniques, sound calls or perches. And although I edit my images in post-processing, I do not use Photoshop compositing such as changing out a sky or background unless I specifically indicate so.

Many of my images display a sense of whimsy or awe or anthropomorphic bird behavior that we recognize in our own behavior. I strive to move the viewer to feel an emotion, whether that be a smile or an “aww” or whatever pops into your heart.

This website is laid out in about a dozen galleries. Rather than have each gallery represent a bird species I have organized them by activities that birds typically do such as eating, fishing, flying, fighting, etc. To me this is a much more interesting way to present these images although I do try to identify species whenever known. I also try to use “Alt Text” on images to assist any visually impaired viewers of the site.

My photographs across the genres and subjects have been selected in over 80 juried competition art shows from San Francisco to New York, Chicago to Houston, Oregon to the Carolinas and, of course, my home state of Colorado. If you are looking for my other website that features other subjects such as Americana, architecture, and landscapes, please go to www.paulmalinowskiphotography.com.

I truly hope you enjoy my website. Please visit frequently as I will be continually updating the galleries with new photos of random “street photography” of birds.

Paul Malinowski

Colorado

 

Galleries

My Presentation of Wildlife Storytelling Through the Lens of a Bird Photographer now on YouTube

My free presentation of Wildlife Storytelling Through the Lens of a Bird Photographer that I presented to the Lone Tree Photo Club was recorded at can now be found on YouTube. The link is https://youtu.be/cQsVSf3hz0E My part starts at about the 12:20 mark and ends at about he 1:330:00 mark. It was really well-received and I think you’ll enjoy it.