View allAll Photos Tagged LessThanAnInch
For todays theme I took this little silver heart I was wearing when I have been very little. My parents wanted to make sure that I don't get lost.
I covered the heart to show a symbiosis of fragile elements. A fragile heart and fragile soft blossom.
#MacroMondays #lessthananinch
The accumulating condensation in the airlock of my fermenting home made wine...
Just a few more possibles I shot for this week's MACRO MONDAYS "Less Than An Inch"...
MACRO MONDAYS Flickr Group: www.flickr.com/groups/macromonday/
HMM!!!
Nikon D7100 + Tokina 100mm f/2.8 FX Macro Lens (AT-X M100 AF PRO D AF 100mm f/2.8)
f/6.3 @ 1/200 @ iso 400
(tweaked in Smart Photo Editor)
My hearing aids are a miracle of miniaturisation.
If the part that goes behind the ear is small, the receiver in the ear is tiny. This subject easily qualifies for the criteria this week which is "less than an inch".
Normally the receiver has a silicone dome fitted with open slots to let natural sounds through. I took it off for the photo.
The white part at the end is called a "Cerustop". Its job is to prevent ear wax from getting inside the receiver. Replacing the Cerustop when it is blocked costs pennies - a lot cheaper than replacing the receiver. .
Photo-Funkauslöser
Macro Mondays 26.2. "Less than an inch" - candidate #3
Diameter (red screw) ~7mm
Focus stack
Glass bead 19mm in diameter. Glass has a slight yellow tint. The rainbow effect is from the glass, as shot. Colours have not been enhanced in any way. No editing apart from cropping
This week's Macro Monday's theme: "Less than an Inch".
Shot with Canon G9XII in macro mode, and cropped some more.
Happy Macro Mondays!
Tile sample of Fimo fiore cane created by Jon Stuart Anderson. In much the same way that millefiori* glass is created, Jon lays strips of Fimo polymer clay together building a design from the inside out. There is a video on his website demonstrating the process. What starts out the size of a loaf of bread is stretched into something very tiny. This tile is about 3/4 inch on a side and is sliced from one of these bars. My tile came with the turtle sculpture shown in the photo in the first comment. You can see some of the detail in use on the final sculpture. I am currently using my tile as a sculpture in my dollhouse shown in the other photo. HMM
* The term millefiori is a combination of the Italian words "mille" (thousand) and "fiori" (flowers).
Macro Mondays theme: Less Than An Inch
Canon IXUS 265 HS
For my Redux as usual I have tried combining a couple themes we did this year. Balance , Double image, Holiday bokeh ,Imperfection. I hope everyone has a wonderful New Year!!
For the Macro Mondays Theme: "Less than an Inch"
HMM
Explore 27 februari 2018
Thank you very much for your time, faves and comments, it's much appreciated
Largest dimension is less than an inch. To avoid negative space and to stay within dimension-rules for this assignment I cropped the image.
Due to an influenza epidemic in our family, the only subject I could come up with this week are these tablets, our remedy for the past few days. No worries: This is a Doctor's Prescription cocktail.
With it being St David’s day later this week I thought that a daffodil just opening for the occasion was pretty apt for the MM theme. With it being in the process of opening out it was less than an inch, just under 2cm when taken.
HMM and thanks for stopping
A decorative costume jewelry piece that I've kept around. reverse mount 50 mm
PS. I believe this is the Czech republics coat of arms. a double tailed lion on a red background.
Photographed for the Macro Mondays theme of "Less Than An Inch". This strange blue plastic moulding is a water pressure reducer from the valve of a water cistern. This macro photograph was taken with a Fuji XT2 using a Samyang 100mm f2.8 macro lens. The subject was lit by daylight from a studio window. A mirror was used to reflect light back onto the subject.
50/118 Haberdashery (sewing or needlework supplies /notions) Hinda's Thimble
Macro Mondays. February 19, 2018. #LessThanAnInch
Happy Macro Monday, my friends!
For six word story.
Taken in Orange County, California. © 2018 All Rights Reserved.
My images are not to be used, copied, edited, or blogged without my explicit permission.
Please!! NO Glittery Awards or Large Graphics...Buddy Icons are OK. Thank You!
Many thanks for every kind comment, fave, your encouraging words, and the inspiration of your fine photography, my Flickr friends! You make my day every day!
Less than an inch - Macro Mondays
Do not use or reproduce this image on Websites/Blog or any other media without my explicit permission. © All Rights Reserved - Barbara Smith 2018.
You are looking at an Airport Wi-Fi/Bluetooth card, taken from an old Apple Macbook Air.
#LessThanAnInch. The little round thing that's in focus is the antenna socket. The metal plate is a radio frequency shield. The pointy thing at upper right is the tip of an ordinary push-pin (just for scale).
Image taken with the Canon EF-M 28mm Macro lens in "Super Macro" mode (aka 1.2x mode). Off-camera flash & diffusers.
HMM!
2:1 approx magnification (area <1/3") with extension tubes + tamron 90/2.5 macro + 49-49 adapter + reversed porst 50/1.7 gallery with this lens setup
maximacro gallery
From Napier, New Zealand whose Art Deco Festival weekend is held towards the end of February and features all sorts of wonderful things. This is part of a set of earrings and broaches I bought when visiting Napier. The Earring is 2.6cm long so I have cropped it to fit with the theme of less than an inch. HMM everyone!
I drew a one inch square on black card and on white card and then tried all sorts of things for Macro Mondays less than an inch. This little flower made from rubber bands fitted well inside the square.
100x the 2018 Edition - square
A 10x pocket loupe attached to the back of my iPhone6s with painters' blue tape and pointed into the mirror. It was hard to get any of the loupe to be both visible and in focus. This is as good as I got it..
“Less Than An Inch", Second choice version for MM.
Bottle finishes or "lips" are almost as varied as the bottle shapes themselves. The term "finish" originates with the mouth-blown bottle production process where the last step in completing a finished bottle was to "finish the lip." Other alternative names for the finish besides lip was "top," "mouth," or "corkage" (Howard 1950; White 1978).