View allAll Photos Tagged macro,
I used my wide angle lens on my nikon 7200 ; lit the subbject with a flashlight in a dark room. My subject is a Kiwi Bird carved from wood.
Cattleya orchid macro.
My 2 family members are now home and have to be ' good ' for a minimum of 6 weeks.
Thanks for your prayers and positive thoughts.
Have a great weekend
Not only did the UPS man bring me a Macro lens today, he showed up about 5 hours early! So I'm outside trying to take a picture of the water drops. I backed away from the camera to throw Sheena's frisbee and when I put my eye back up to my camera...there was a fly. He landed so perfectly I didn't even have to refocus.
He must be the Macro fairy.
I found a wasp in the house. Unusual for this time of year. The picture was constructed from a focus stack of 88 photos taken with a Schneider 40mm lens reverse mounted on bellows. The subject was illuminated by diffused flash.
Macro Mondays - Alternate Pics
Kanchipuram Silk is woven with heavy silk and gold cloth are considered to be special and are worn on occasions and festivities
Kanchipuram Silk sarees are woven from pure mulberry silk thread. The pure mulberry silk used in the making of Kanchipuram saris comes from South India and the zari comes from Gujarat. To weave a Kanchipuram sari three shuttles are used. While the weaver works on the right side, his aide works on the left side shuttle. The border color and design are usually quite different from the body. If the pallu (the hanging end of the sari) has to be woven in a different shade, it is first separately woven and then delicately joined to the Sari. The part where the body meets the pallu is often denoted by a zig zag line.[8] In a genuine Kanchipuram Silk Sari, body and border are woven separately and then interlocked together. The joint is woven so strongly that even if the sarees tears, the border will not detach.That differentiates the kanchivaram silk sarees from the others
Saris are distinguished by their wide contrast borders. Temple borders, checks, stripes and floral (buttas) are traditional designs found on a Kanchipuram sarees. The patterns and designs in the kanchipuram sarees were inspired with images and scriptures in South Indian temples or natural features like leaves, birds and animals.[10] Kanchipuram sarees vary widely in cost depending upon the intricacy of work, colors, pattern, material used like zari (gold thread) etc. The silk is also known for its quality and craftsmanship, which has helped earn its name