View allAll Photos Tagged jumping
July 12, 2022
I found this jumping spider running across this dusty glass surface. He paused a moment to allow me a few shots.
(Too bad about the dust, but I wasn't sure I would have been able to catch him, clean the glass, and get him to pose again.)
Brewster, Massachusetts
Cape Cod - USA
Photo by brucetopher
© Bruce Christopher 2022
All Rights Reserved
...always learning - critiques welcome.
Tools: Canon 7D & iPhone 11.
No use without permission.
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My son loves to play in the hayfield jumping from bale to bale. This was caught as the sun went down. I was able to capture his long-legged silhouette.
I've actually never seen this kind of jumping spider, or photographed one. So the composition of the photo isn't that great, but it is a jumping spider that i just didn't want to miss taking a photo of it :). 18-55mm kit lens on a reverse ring and using a trash bag for flash diffuser.
Salticidae - Jumping Spider
A Salticidae Jumping Spider which had been walking around in the kitchen so I could not resist the chance to capture some quick Macro Images.
The Image was captured with a Nikon D610 and Sigma 150mm Macro, 1/320 Seconds, f/5.6, ISO 1250.
Photo was edited in Luminar 4 (AI Structure, AI. Enhance, Detail Enhancer).
Instagram: Trav.Hale,
Twitter: @TravisHale,
Facebook: TravHale
500px: TravisHale,
Flickr: TravisH1984,
Web: www.travishale.com
Central American Jumping Pitviper, Sarapiqui lowland rainforest, Costa Rica
There seems to be a few of these Jumping Spiders in some of the bushes in my garden. Sometimes they can be friendly but most of the time, they are skittish and may allow only 1 shot before they hide on the other side of the branch. Once they jump, it's almost impossible to see them again.
Canon EOS 7D, EF100mm f/2.8 Macro USM, Sigma EM-140 DG Ring light,f/22, 1/250, ISO 250
Jumping Jacks - This Red Phalarope was adorably bouncing up and down while bathing, almost looking like he was doing jumping jacks.
Myself and couple friends braved the windy roads, sand, muck, and rambunctious children at the beach to photograph this cooperative bird.
Red Phalaropes breed in the Arctic Tundra, so we were fortunate to photograph this male during a brief window before he fattened up on sand crabs and departed north.
The camera doesn't do full justice to this bird's striking rufous breeding plumage, but I was truly grateful to observe this lifer up close and come away with so many images.
IG: @sswildlife
Species: Red Phalarope (Phalaropus fulicarius)
Location: California, USA
Equipment: Canon EOS R3 + RF 200-800mm IS
Settings: 1/3200s, ISO: 2500, f/7.1 @354mm, Handheld, Electronic Shutter
One of the kids we found on top of the rocks in the beach in Calella. The moment when you are alone and you need to face your fears to jump. We waited there for a while but the poor boy was too afraid to jump and he never made it. Next time!.
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© 2015 Jordi Corbilla - All Rights Reserved.
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Testing my new Raynox DCR-250 attached to canon EF100mm f/2.8L Macro IS USM. This combination allows me to get more than 1X magnification.
The spider i identified it as from the family Jumping spider using the eyes arrangements, but i could not find the exact name. Its size is about 4mm.
I know the focus is not perfect :)
Thank you for your faves and kind comments, very much appreciated - deaR♥‿♥
An abandoned ski jump in Warsaw, Built in the 50s. Out of use since the end of the 80s.
Only View On Black
Xera can fly! This picture was quite challenging with the camera I had at the time. As with many older digital cameras, there was an annoying shutter lag, making action shots very challenging. Fortunately, Xera loved to jump, so she jumped over this woodpile several times before I got the timing just right. By then, the light was getting a bit dim, but I was happy I captured her in action.
I'm sorry for the poor quality of this photo, but it was not easy to capture the right moment!
I hope you enjoy it the same!
Scientific fact states these cactus don't really jump. But if you get close enough, it seems like they do. I experienced just such an attack as one 'jumped' out and latched onto my bare ankle.
I couldn't just pull it off. So after a pause to think about it, I used a wadded up hoodie:
1 ... 2 .... 3 ... YANK!!
There I am alone in the desert, howling & cussing. I can't recall the last time I had a good cuss!
The only good thing to say about them is that they photograph beautifully. This is a Lensbaby shot taken at sunset in Joshua Tree.