tyflier
[Insert Witty Commentary]
oh boy, :roflmao::roflmao:
You know what? you're right- obviously having hatched two such individuals and held an adult means I'm wrong because Tyflier never saw such a snake. Woe to experience and eye-witness, obviously you knowing your way with cameras mean you know all there is to know about animal pigmentation.
And -I- take myself too seriously... if I felt any -possible- guilt of being stubborn, you just blew it out the window.
Dude, what is your problem? You know what...do some research on lighting temperatures and color casts.
The two pictures you posted...same snake? Ask your buddy that took the pictures what sort of lighting he used...
My guess is that the first one was taken using a tungsten flash, based on the high white content of the reflected light. I would guess that the second one was taken under normal household incadescant lighting. Probably between 40 and 60 watts, judging from the yellow cast.
I'm not TALKING about animal pigmentation. I'm talking about light temperature and reflectivity. I don't have to have held this hybrid hybrid to know how light interacts with reflective surfaces. And I DEFINITELY don't need a lecture on hybrids to understand temperature-related color casts of various light sources.
And yea...knowing my way around a camera DOES mean I know my way around light. That's what photography is all about...light, and how it effects the things we are looking at. There is a thing called "White Balance" which is used specifically to control color casts from various light sources. Here's an example--
Here is Diamond, my boa, taken using an off-camera metal halide light source. Notice the blue tint?
Same snake, same cage, a couple minutes later(or earlier...don't remember), taken using a TUNGSTEN flash. Notice how white the reflected light is?
Now imagine how different those two pictures would look if my boa was white...
Don't be so quick to insult people, Oren. Understanding the properties of light is something a photographer MUST know to be successful. This has nothing to do with the hybridization of the animals. I;ve seen the SAME THING in non-hybrids, pure, wild caught Cali kings.