View allAll Photos Tagged macro_flower

My favorite online camera junk store was offering a big discount on accessories, and the Canon Life Size Converter counted as an accessory, so my 50/2.5 can now be a lot more macro than before. Went out pokemon hunting and took some close up pictures of boring flowers because I'm boring.

Christmas cactus flowering a bit early. Natural light. Focus stacked using zerene

Crocus anther X5. Focus stacked using zerene

Near from a canal there was these tiny little flower...

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A Bord du canal il y avait ces toute petites fleur...

Miniature pot rose. Full flash. Focus stacked using zerene

Japanese anemone flower. Natural light. See www.flickr.com/photos/lordv/28854256586/ for a 3D version

Chrysanthemum flower - cut flower. Natural light. Focus stacked using zerene. Oshiro 60mm

Periwinkle flower. Natural light. Focus stacked using zerene

Rain drops on forsythia. Focus stacked using zerene

Botanical Gardens of the Ozarks

Springdale, AR

Macro using the olloclip iPhone lens.

Views of a cyclamen flower. Focus stacked using zerene

Bay tree flower. Focus stacked using zerene

Peruvian lily. LED light source. Oshiro 60mm. Focus stacked using zerene

All images taken with a Sigma 90mm macro lens at 1:2 ratio.

Utricularia are carnivorous plants usually growing in water or very wet soils (or occasionally epiphytically on trees!). Their underwater or underground traps are very complex and suck in small prey such as insects when triggered. They're actually some of the most common and wide-ranging carnivorous plants, and can be found in every US state and all continents besides Antarctica. However, most or all of the plant is underwater or hardly visible when not flowering, so you're unlikely to spot them unless they're in flower!

 

Some species like this one are actually known for being weedy in cultivation and spreading between pots.

 

(Focus stack of 130 photos, flowers approximately 5mm in size.)

Whitebell internals. Focus stacked using zerene. See www.flickr.com/photos/lordv/25257275287/ for a 3D version

I am not really up on moths and butterfly names, but I have been told this is a "Burnet Moth" and is not seen very often. This one was on Burgh Island, Bigbury-On-Sea.

ISO1000. Raynox 250. At first I thought there was quite a bit of CA around petals but actually its mostly the curved up edges of the petals! Colours have not been touched up - as came from camera.

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