View allAll Photos Tagged macro_captures_
Macro capture of the Yellow Garden Spider on the grounds of Naval Live Oaks Preserve in Gulf Breeze Florida. This was a single exposure with a flash [Godox V350O) being used. Camera used was the OM-1 Mark 2 with the OM SYSTEM M.Zuiko Digital ED 60mm f/2.8 Macro Lens. This was a handheld shot with camera settings of 1/125 sec at f/20, ISO 400. Post processing with Adobe Lightroom Classic.
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Pulsa L para verla más grande sobre negro.
Hit L to see big on black.
Bee happy, don't worry 🐝💠
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📷 Nikon D7200
🔎 Laowa 60mm f2.8 2x ultra macro lens Mieke MK-14EXT macro TTL ring flash
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Saumwanze (Coreus marginatus).
Kamera Sony A-6400,das Lomo Plan Mikroskope Objektiv 8-X, ISO-100,Bildern-231,Belichtungszeit-1/4 Sek. Balgengerät, Vergrößerung 8-X. 3-LED Lampen Diffusor.
Hem bug (Coreus marginatus)
Camera Sony A-6400, the Lomo microscope objective 8-X, ISO-100, images-231, exposure time-1/4 sec. Bellows device, magnification 8-X. 3-LED lamp diffuser
Macro capture of a native fern frond in our garden. Hadn't noticed how fabulous they are until I took this photo!
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Teil des Schmetterlingsflügels des Admirals. Kamera Sony Alpha 6400..4 - LED-Lampen. 70er Vergrößerung. Chinesisches Mikroskop Objektiv Planachromat 40x. Monokulares Mikroskop "Euromex". Belichtung 4 Sekunden. Stapel von 20 Fotos.
Part of the Admiral's butterfly wing. Camera Sony Alpha 6400..4 - LED lamps. 70-X magnification. Chinese microscope objective Planachromat 40x. "Euromex" monocular microscope. Exposure 4 seconds. Stack of 20 photos.
Часть крыла бабочки адмирала. Камера Сони Альфа 6400..4 -светодиодные лампы. Увеличение в 70-Х. Китайский микроскопный объектив план ахромат 40х. Монокулярный микроскоп «Euromex». Выдержка 4 секунды. Стек 20 фото.
Swallow-tailed Moth. (Ourapteryx sambucaria) resting on my combat jeans. Usual habitat, woodland, hedgerows, parks and gardens.
The wings are a pale yellow colour which fades whiter with age, with two darker lines crossing the forewings and one line crossing the hindwings.
The adults are occasionally disturbed during the day but they are strictly nocturnal flying rapidly at night. They are attracted to light. They overwinter as caterpillars in a bark crevice.
Best viewed full screen on a PC or cast to TV.
View On Black Two old rejected kodachrome slides were re-mounted in the same frame and then macro captured. One photo is of the old inner city of Jerusalem, and the other of a man I called Zorba, the owner of a Youth Hostel I stayed at on the Island of Crete, south of Greece. thirdeyephotocreations.com/
A macro capture of a snowflake captured with a macro lens and a shallow depth of field. I love the elegance of the capture and the added texture and bokeh really enhance the image.
Snow crystals form when tiny supercooled cloud droplets (about 10 μm in diameter) freeze. These droplets are able to remain liquid at temperatures lower than −18 °C (0 °F), because to freeze, a few molecules in the droplet need to get together by chance to form an arrangement similar to that in an ice lattice, then the droplet freezes around this "nucleus." Experiments show that this "homogeneous" nucleation of cloud droplets only occurs at temperatures lower than −35 °C (−31 °F).[3] In warmer clouds an aerosol particle or "ice nucleus" must be present in (or in contact with) the droplet to act as a nucleus. The particles that make ice nuclei are very rare compared to nuclei upon which liquid cloud droplets form; however, it is not understood what makes them efficient. Clays, desert dust and biological particles may be effective,[4] although to what extent is unclear. Artificial nuclei include particles of silver iodide and dry ice, and these are used to stimulate precipitation in cloud seeding.[5]
Once a droplet has frozen, it grows in the supersaturated environment, which is one where air is saturated with respect to ice when the temperature is below the freezing point. The droplet then grows by deposition of water molecules in the air (vapor) onto the ice crystal surface where they are collected. Because water droplets are so much more numerous than the ice crystals due to their sheer abundance, the crystals are able to grow to hundreds of micrometers or millimeters in size at the expense of the water droplets. This process is known as the Wegener–Bergeron–Findeisen process. The corresponding depletion of water vapor causes the droplets to evaporate, meaning that the ice crystals grow at the droplets' expense. These large crystals are an efficient source of precipitation, since they fall through the atmosphere due to their mass, and may collide and stick together in clusters, or aggregates. These aggregates are usually the type of ice particle that falls to the ground.[6] Guinness World Records list the world's largest (aggregate) snowflakes as those of January 1887 at Fort Keogh, Montana; allegedly one measured 15 inches (38 cm) wide. Although this report by a farmer is doubtful, aggregates of three or four inches width have been observed. Single crystals the size of a dime have been observed.[1]
The exact details of the sticking mechanism remain controversial. Possibilities include mechanical interlocking, sintering, electrostatic attraction as well as the existence of a "sticky" liquid-like layer on the crystal surface. The individual ice crystals often have hexagonal symmetry. Although the ice is clear, scattering of light by the crystal facets and hollows/imperfections mean that the crystals often appear white in color due to diffuse reflection of the whole spectrum of light by the small ice particles.[7] The shape of the snowflake is determined broadly by the temperature and humidity at which it is formed.[6] Rarely, at a temperature of around −2 °C (28 °F), snowflakes can form in threefold symmetry — triangular snowflakes.[8] The most common snow particles are visibly irregular, although near-perfect snowflakes may be more common in pictures because they are more visually appealing. It is unlikely that any two snowflakes are alike due to the estimated 1019 (10 quintillion) water molecules which make up a typical snowflake,[9] which grow at different rates and in different patterns depending on the changing temperature and humidity within the atmosphere that the snowflake falls through on its way to the ground.[10]
Carolina Grasshopper (Dissosteira carolina) - Penny Lake Preserve, Boothbay Harbor, Maine
These guys are good fliers, and look a bit like a White Admiral (which we also find in Maine), 'cept for their higher flap frequency and more more direct line of flight than a butterfly.
Hand-held macro captures with the 300 + 1.4xTC rig.
(Canon 300 mm prime, + 1.4 x TC, on an APS-C body)
For these captures I cranked the lens focus ring to its MFD (minimum focus distance), then starting at 6-7 feet out, moved in on the hopper until it came into focus, and then went out of focus again because I was too close. I then backed off a couple inches and snapped off the shot with the center AF box on its face, with my elbow on my knee for vertical stabilization.
And don't forget when you need extra stabilization for slower shutter speeds, there's always the the double knee to elbow, butt/face tripod as demonstrated by Dave in the comment section.
Some macro captures of a Hopper head and female Broad Bodied Chaser, this is a Leaf or Plant Hopper, not seen one quite so round looking as this with red eyes, anyone know ID to this
Cotton Thistle (Onopordum acanthium) showing arachnoid cobwebbiness. As we all know, the Thistle is the National Emblem of Bonnie Scotland!
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Bonnie Scotland (We Have A Dream)
Лишайник,увеличение в 10 раз. Камера Сони Альфа 6400. LOMO .ИСО-100, выдержка 1/3 секунды. Стекинг 101 фотография.3-ЛЕД лампы. Мaкро мех.
Eine Flechte, 10-fache Vergrößerung. Sony Alpha 6400-Kamera.. ISO-100, Belichtung 1/3 Sekunde. Stapeln von 191 Fotos. 3-LED-Lampen. Balgengerät. Diffusor.
A lichen, magnified 10 times. Sony Alpha 6400 camera. LOMO-10 X, ISO-100, exposure 1/3 second. Stack of 101 photos. 3 LED lamps. Bellows device. Diffuser.
24.11.19
Macro at Panti Forest , Kota Tinggi, Johor
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Macro captured with the Nikkor 60mm f2.8 micro with Raynox DC250
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24.11.19
Macro at Panti Forest , Kota Tinggi, Johor
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Macro captured with the Nikkor 70-300mm f4.5-5.6 AFP with NiSi Close Up Lens
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A Macro capture inside the poppy flower.just stunning Beauty......we are blessed for nature.
Better on Black
Macro capture of two touching buttercup
flowers. Photo taken in Hadley, Barnet,
Hertfordshire, UK in May 2014.