View allAll Photos Tagged excellent_macros
This katydid had been visiting one zinnia plant for several days and this morning it was gone - because of its size I'm pretty convinced it migrated to a nearby cucumber blossom. I think the internal flash of the em10 ii does an excellent job with insects.
Of course, with more "flighty" insects I have to use a longer lens and especially for butterflies I will choose my Canon 7D + 300 f/4L IS lens which has an excellent macro mode, or a micro43 body with the Panasonnic 100-400 lens, which feels awkward at best, but can yield some excellent captures.
This may be the best featured camera in the set I got via my friend but it's really just another plastic fantastic compared to say the Varex IIa. :-)
It is a very good camera though with an excellent macro 50 f/2.8. Only problem seems to be the coating on the back seems to be disintegrating either from holding it of from an address label (most of the other kit had one stuck on). This model was the basis for both Minolta's digital SLRs.
2000-2004 (?)
Happened upon a lens for industrial automation in a surplus shop. Bought it for 25USD and adapted it to be a M42 mount so it can be mounted on almost any camera with M42.
I can focus it to infinity and as close as 15cm, adding a few extension tubes make it an excellent macro lens. I think it is better than my Canon EF-100 macro lens at 1:1.
Thank you to everyone who has invited, faved and commented on "Exposed". I'm overwhelmed and grateful keeping them coming though :)
Happy Perfect Purple Saturday!
This is from last year's spring and straight out of the camera except for a crop ... I need to find signs of spring 2009 now .... where shall I look ....?
Celle-ci était prise en printemps 2008 et est ici sans manipulation (sauf cadrage).
Je voudrais trouver des signes du printemps 2009 ... je cherche où ....?
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Update at 1800 CET .... I found Spring 2009 - just outside chez moi ;-).... it's here...
Take a look here too!
I grew potatoes last year. I don't eat many, though, and most of them have sat in a colander through the autumn and winter. In the last few weeks, they started to grow, sending up shoots nearly a foot tall. I intend to plant them, but I noticed they became infested with aphids. I don't know where they came from, but I assume they will die off when buried. Before I do that though, I figured they'd make excellent macro subjects, at a time of year when few other insects are about.
Although the head is out of focus, I love how the flash has caught the iridescence of this insect's wing. It's a good start for my new lens. 7x magnification - this frame is just over 5mm across.
Many years later, I have been told this is the peach-potato aphid!
Canon EOS 5D mark III, Canon MP-E 65mm f/2.8 1-5x, Canon EF Extender 1.4x III, Canon Speedlite 600EX-RT (tripod, Live View, homemade flash tube/reflector).
91mm, f/8, 1/80, ISO 800, flash at full strength (exif incorrect).
Click here to view larger size photo on black
Nikon D7000 with Lens Leica 80-200mm f/4 R mounted with Leitax adapter. Taken hand-held with ISO 800 f/5.6, 1/250s. In order to reduce the minimum focusing distance, I added a Nikon 62mm close-up lens No 5T on a step-up adapter ring 60/62 (the Leica lens has a 60mm filter thread).
It has been a while since I took one of my Leica lenses out for a walk in the forest. I remembered an excellent macro shot of a bee I took with the same set-up. I wanted to test it again and see how crispy the details look under a 100% magnification (actual pixel) of my newly acquired 16 Megapixel camera Nikon D7000.
Under photoshop I enlarged two zones of this picture of a dead tree trunk and the results are amazingly crisp. The DX format of the camera uses only the center of the lens optics therefore making the image very sharp even in the corners/borders. The Leica 80-200mm was already very sharp on FX format starting at aperture f/5.6 and above (vignetting and little soft at f/4). This lens on DX format is sharper at f/4 and eliminates vignetting.
I was thinking of selling it for lack of use due to its manual focus constraint but I think that I should use it more often for these Macro situations where only Manual Focus works anyway. The focus distance of this set-up is about 30cm which is convenient for insects photography.
Looking through old images I came across this one from Durham NC, 7 September 2004.
Yellow-fringed Dolichomia - Hypsopygia olinalis (wingspan ~25 mm)
This was found at a household light. Photo taken with my first digital camera, a Nikon Coolpix 4500. That camera had excellent macro capabilities, and the autofocus was quite reliable even at the closest ranges. (I recently bought a replacement battery and take the occasional image with it.) Some schmutz on the background was cloned out for aesthetic reasons.
Happy Wing Wednesday!
✰ This photo was featured on The Epic Global Showcase here: bit.ly/23URrdn
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According to my son butt cracks are a fashion accessory… ——————————– iPhone 5 using squidcam lenses x10 macro. Hope it’s enjoyed. #excellent_macros #weeklymobilemacro #ptk_macro #drop_arts #macro_highlight #macroaddictsanonymous #flowersandmacro #cool_macro #macro_freaks #top_macro #fotofanatics_macro_ #macro_brilliance #igbest_macros #rsa_macro_membership #PHOTOARENA_NATURE #mac_archive #nature_of_our_world #igbest_macros #pocket_macro #bokeh_kings #electric_macro #naturehippys #drops_creative #aw_naturephoto #backyard_dreams #mafia_naturelover #worldbestgram #em_member #bokeh_addicts #fiftyshades_of_nature
by @dan_mab on Instagram.
Mückenflügel,.Kamera Sony Alpha 6400,Mikroskope Objektiv LOMO 10-x, Belichtungszeit 1/6 Sekunde,ISO-125, 63 Fotos,Balgengerät,Diffusor,3-LED Lampen.
Mosquito wing ,Crane fly, -, camera Sony Alpha 6400, microscope lens LOMO 10-x, exposure time 1/6 second, ISO-100 ,63 photos, bellows device, diffuser, 3-LED lamps.
Комара крыло камера Sony Alpha 6400, объектив микроскопа LOMO 10 -x, время выдержки 1 /6 секунды, ISO-100, 63 фотографии, макро мех, диффузор, 3-светодиодные лампы.
Taken using my compact camera. SONY Super Steadyshot DSC T20. This tiny camera has excellent macro facility. It is as good as any SLR camera.
As if the sun rises, a happy yellow beautiful flower #Petals #flower #closeup #macro #Blooming #bns_macro #fabmacro #macro_captures #excellent_macros #composition #astounding #NaturePhotography #Delicate #Delightful #Astonishing #Intimate #CloseUpPhotography #Developed #Picturesque #dark #photograph #photographer #vsco #vscocam #photographers_tr
Cactus de Navidad y Pascua
Desde hace años, muchas variedades de cactus han sido adaptadas para el ámbito del hogar, dado su enorme valor ornamental, y hoy figuran en la mayoría de los viveros y establecimientos de cultivos especializados. En esa situación se encuentran la Schlumbergera y el Rhipsalidopsis, especies que disfrutan de una floración denominada comúnmente cactus de Navidad.
Cómo mantener sus flores
Son especies bastante agradecidas que necesitan pocos cuidados. De hecho, unos mínimos detalles serán suficientes para que sus flores estén esplendorosas durante todas las Fiestas.
Precisamente en estas fechas es cuando se debe controlar el crecimiento de ambos ejemplares. Para ello tienes que recortar algunos brotes, que, a su vez, podrás utilizar para multiplicarlos. Los cactus de Navidad y Pascua enraízan fácilmente a partir de dos o tres esquejes de yemas debajo de un vidrio.
La forma que tienen es conocida como Foliosa. Cuentan con unos tallos muy singulares, planos (bien alargados, o bien redondeados), que se asemejan a hojas. Se dan únicamente en los géneros de hábitos epífitos, ya que no tienen la necesidad de almacenar agua. Necesitan humedad y sitios sombríos; si crecieran en lugares silvestres, lo harían en los recovecos de árboles y rocas.
Christmas and Easter Cactus
For years, many varieties of cacti are adapted to the household level, given its huge ornamental value, and now found in most nurseries and facilities for specialty crops. That is the status and Rhipsalidopsis Schlumbergera species enjoyed a bloom commonly known as Christmas cactus.
How to keep your flowers
Species are quite grateful that need little care. In fact, a minimum details will be sufficient for their flowers are splendid throughout the holidays.
Precisely at this time is when you should control the growth of both copies. To do this you have to cut some outbreaks, which, in turn, you can use to multiply. The Christmas and Easter cactus easily rooted from cuttings two or three buds under glass.
The way they have is known as foliosa. They have some very unique stems, flat (either elongated or rounded), which resemble leaves. Are unique to the genera of epiphytic habits because they do not have the need to store water. They need moisture and shady places, if growing in wild places, they would in the crevices of trees and rocks.