View allAll Photos Tagged macro,
Essai de proxi / macro avec un 18-55 mm (Ă 55 mm) et deux bagues d'allonge (11 mm et 17 mm).
Quel plaisir cette matinée couché par terre en forêt !
Found some macro shots of a dandelion which I think are rather cool...more oldies...
I just read about how nutritious dandelions are..the whole plant is edible and yet many of us look upon them as weeds and work hard to eradicate them... What about you? Do you eat dandelion greens. tea. wine???
Eye see you!
Taken at a Greystones Camera Club Macro workshop facilitated by Mian Photography (Milca & Andy) who are brilliant!
Red ants on a cornflower bud. Not seen this many ants on one bud before.
You can clearly see the reason why though - there are pools of honeydew on the bud. Not sure if this is natural or whether the ants actually damage the bud to make it leak. Focus stacked using zerene stacker
Round Bottle Brush flower (one of the last photos of my hike yesterday evening)... To me, this one resembles a cheerleader with pom-poms : )
I watched this lizard for ages yesterday. It wasn't bothered by me at all. At one point it ran across and tried to lick my finger! At this stage it had got covered in cob webs and you can see the sand particles quite clearly. It then went rolling around wiping the cobwebs off it's face against the stones.
Put a crop in below to show it's amazing eye.
Put a blog together tonight about some of the amazing critters you can find in Yorkshire.
This pair of daisies was also subject to the "flipped 50" macro style.
UPDATE (3 February 2016): Sometimes looking back at some of these things allows you to take stock of all the errors you've made and how it should have been shot. I try to take the errors as they are but also try to realize that some of these shots worked not because of a lack of skill and a lot of luck, but because they were part of the learning process.
Raindrop on pond filter brush. Not done one of these shots for ages but like how the nylon fibres act as light guides. I have changed the hue in PS
Bibionidae are medium-sized flies with a body length from 4.0 to 10.0 mm. The body is black, brown, or rusty, and thickset, with thick legs. The antennae are moniliform. The front tibiae bear large strong spurs or a circlet of spines. The tarsi are five-segmented and bear tarsal claws, pulvilli, and a well developed empodium. The wings have two basal cells (posterior basal wing cell and basal wing cell), but are without a discoidal wing cell.