View allAll Photos Tagged macro_captures

After about 60 - 70 pics w/ speedlight, only one worked..My knees are killing me..lol..I have to start using a tripod..

 

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Sony a5000 + Canon FD 28mm 2.8 inverted + internal flash

Details on this unknown plant is so beautiful.

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here's the snowflake on black

 

clarifying for those curious -- this is a real snowflake. macro capture and then cropped. thanks for the visit and interest!

 

Macro capture of a fly sitting on a brown knapweed blossom.

Lucky shot... Didn't even know what I captured until I brought it home and looked on laptop..was surprised

 

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taken by my smartphone, I saw them too cute, an awesome things in my little garden.

A macro detail of a small, polished lace agate slab - it shows some rather pretty patterning, I think, and the red-orange-brown color is natural (of course).

Hier konnte ich einen wunderschönen C-Falter einfangen der mir in meiner Sammlung noch fehlte 😊

What's not to like in this unusual coloured rose? There is one garden that has a lot of roses and many are very unusual colours. Taken in local garden July 9, 2017.

Ash Tree seeds. Thanks Merit www.flickr.com/photos/meritdejong/

It has is own beauty during the Winter months.

: Attenborough Nature Reserve. Winter 2022

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This amazing (and slightly over-the-top) design of a caterpillar is a vapourer or rusty tussock moth (Orgyia antiqua).

 

I've photographed these before, always on the leaves of the purple loosestrife (Lythrum salicaria), and think they make great subjects for macro captures, but when shooting this one I was a bit annoyed as those fine hairs coming from the red spots kept looking jagged on the camera's display, like the resolution was really really low or something.

 

Getting them up on the computer monitor however I realized that it was actually the other way around. The hairs are in fact feathered and while previous attempts didn't reveal this, the Canom MP-E65mm lens at 1.5:1 magnification is good enought to pick this up.

🐌 Snail

zoom in for more detail

Peacock feather

ريشة الطاووس مكبرة بمقدار ٢٠ ضعف

مجموع الصور المستخدمة للحصول على هذه النتيجة هي ٣٦١ صورة باستخدام تقنية التكديس

📷 #sonya7riii

🔭: 20x LWD objective lens

💡 : KUANG REN Macro Twin Lite

IOS:200

Exposure time :1/160

# of stacked Pics : 361

Step size : 2um

stacked with : #Wemacro using #affinityphoto

#kings_insects

#macroclique

#bns_macro

#macro_mood

#dream_macro

#macro_of_our_world

#macro_secrets

#wholelottabugs

#best_macro

#macrophotography

#macro_highlight

#mat_macro

#Macro_Perfection

#bbcearth

#super_macro_channel

#featured_macros

#macro_attractive

#macro_merahputih

#color_macro_world

#macro_kings

#macro_freaks

#omphub

#tgif_insects

#macro_captures

#raw_insects

#natgeomagarab

Pyrrhopyge charybdis

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Familia: Hesperiidae

Orden: Lepidoptera

Clase: Insecta

Filo: Arthropoda

Reino: Animalia

A macro capture of a single.. 'Lobelia tupa'.. 'Devil's tobacco'.. flower..

 

HFF.. Thanks for all your support.. have a most wonderful weekend

Macro capture of Turkeytail mushroom, lichen and moss on Garry oak tree branch in late February.

 

Garry oak ecosystems range from shady woodlands to open meadows with scattered trees which support many life forms including moss, lichens and fungi. Under the shelter of oak canopies or in meadows, spring wildflowers, grasses, mosses, and a variety of shrubs flourish.

Macro capture of the flowers of the Aloe plant in our garden.

A macro capture under the backlit pink Cosmos flower with a bonus welcome visitor...the fly.

 

Photography: Fujifilm XH1, Fujinon 80mm f2.8, @f3.2.

Pollinator Pom-Pom—the buttonbush blossom bringing full cheer to bees, butterflies, and the occasional macro photographer. Nature’s fluffiest fan favorite.

Nature

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A macro capture of a leaf with moist from the morning mist.

Mallard Duck.

Arnot Hill Park, Nottinghamshire.

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From my garden. Ferns to Flickr. They are steadily unfolding and now's the perfect time to get some macro shots.

 

Fern: Polypodiopsida, Polypodiophyta

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Un escargot affamé sur une tranche de pastèque

(Sq Crop) A macro capture of this lovely butterfly.. Gatekeeper Pyronia tithonus.. feeding on a bramble flower.. in Teignmouth.. I hope you like me..!!

 

Have a lovely night.. evening.. day.. Thans for your comments.. faves.. awards.. etc.. NO multi invites please..

Springtime in winter...Macro capture of a dewy primula starting to bloom, unfurling its petals through wintry rainy days in December.

🐌 Snail

zoom in for more detail

My friend Dana and I encountered this little eastern mud turtle wandering about one of the back roads and set it up for a couple of macro captures; it didn't really work out...the lighting was bad, the turtle wasn't happy, I got bit...so we brought it to a nearby pond and set it on its way...it's the journey; not always the destination...

 

( 56 of 365 )

 

What the title said , things getting a bit tight today and no shot for today !! Therefore a quick macro capture of a fridge magnet we have - a detailed look at the front end of an Avro Lancaster .

So in the nick of time a shot for today .

This is a macro capture of ice highlighted with gelled flash.

 

Macro - Canon 24-105 at f16 105mm using 49mm fotodiox extension tubes

 

Lighting - YN 560iii gelled with rust filter handheld camera right below subject

Nikon D3300 + 50mm + Extension tube with external flash and DIY diffuser

Wonderful nature at Oldmoor Wood, Nottinghamshire, in the good care of The Woodland Trust. I visited primarily for the English Bluebells.

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Clifton Grove Local Nature Reserve, Nottinghamshire.

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Green Frog (Rana Clamitans Melanota) - Ice Pond, Morse Pond Nature Preserve, Seguinland Road, Georgetown, Maine

 

Reflected vs. transparent

Why can I see its foot under water?

What's up with that?

I'm thinkin' it's all about physics, and has to do with the angle light is reflected off the water surface plane, surface tension, and periodic changes in the angle of the surface plane (caused by the frog's throat movement during it's breathing cycle). And, that during this capture the frog's throat movement caused the reflection of it's throat to be reflected somewhere other than at the camera, and that's why we can see its foot under water.

 

Now I'm wishing I had shot a burst¹ so I could see if its throat was reflected in some of the captures, and its foot was visible in others. Oh, well Maybe next time . . .

 

¹ Multiple captures in fast succession.

But I tend not to do that with macro captures at slow shuttle speeds, since "bursts" will cause the camera to vibrate and cause motion blur in the image. And as you can see I was already wide open at 1/60, with the only way to minimize "camera shake" being high ISO, and who wants high ISO noise in their macros? 👎

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