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Kestrel Pair Print

Sale price: £22.95

  • Kestrel pair print on premium 260 g/m² satin paper
  • Limited edition - only 50 ever printed
  • A range of sizes from 8x6" up to A4
  • Ideal for bird watchers, wildlife lovers, and nature-themed interiors
  • Free UK shipping and eco-friendly packaging
Actual print size:
Size Guide

The sizes shown are the actual print size. The paper size will be bigger than the actual print size. For example, my A4 prints are printed on 297mm x 420mm paper and will feature a border. You may need to trim the border to accommodate your frame.

My Approach to AI and Image Integrity

AI is now embedded in almost every part of modern life, and photography is no exception. Cameras, software, and distribution platforms all rely on increasingly complex algorithms. I don’t pretend photography exists in some untouched, pre-digital bubble.

That said, there is a clear line I choose not to cross.

In my wildlife photography, I do not use generative or reconstructive AI tools. This includes features such as generative remove, AI sharpening, AI refocus, or AI de-noise that invents or replaces detail. If a tool is creating pixels that were not recorded by the camera at the moment of capture, I don’t use it.

Why? Because wildlife photography, at its core, is about witnessing real moments in the natural world. The unpredictability, the missed shots, the imperfect light, the noise at high ISO - these are not flaws to be erased, they are part of the reality of working with wild animals on their terms. When software begins to hallucinate feathers, fur, eyes, or backgrounds, the photograph stops being a record and becomes an illustration.

My post-processing is limited to traditional, transparent adjustments: exposure, contrast, colour balance, tonal control, and careful, non-generative noise reduction and sharpening where needed. These edits aim to present the scene as faithfully as possible, not to improve or "fix" nature after the fact.

This is not a judgement on how others choose to work. Photography is a broad church, and there is room for art, experimentation, and AI-assisted creativity. My choice is simply about honesty - with myself, with the viewer, and with the animals I photograph.

When you see an image here, you are looking at a real moment, captured as it happened. Nothing added. Nothing invented.

Please Note

Mounting hardware and frames are not included with prints and are only shown for illustrative purposes.

Need another size?

If you would like a size that is not listed, please get in touch.

About The

Kestrel

The common kestrel is one of the most recognisable birds of prey in the UK, best known for its ability to hover almost motionless above fields and roadside verges. Smaller and more lightly built than a buzzard, kestrels have long, pointed wings and a slim tail, giving them a nimble, agile appearance in flight. Males and females are easily told apart, with males showing a blue-grey head and tail, while females are warmer brown with heavier barring. Their sharp eyesight and rapid wingbeats make them perfectly adapted to hunting in open landscapes.

Kestrels hunt primarily by scanning the ground for movement, often hovering into the wind before dropping swiftly onto prey. Small mammals, particularly voles, make up the bulk of their diet, though insects and small birds are also taken. This hunting style makes kestrels a favourite subject for wildlife photographers, as their hovering behaviour offers brief but repeatable moments of stillness in the air. Whether perched on a post or suspended against a soft sky, the common kestrel brings a sense of energy and precision that contrasts beautifully with slower, heavier raptors.