View allAll Photos Tagged macrobutterfly
This photograph of a butterfly was taken with a Canon 400D SLR and a Canon EF 100mm f/2.8 Macro lens. A Canon Macro Twin Lite MT-24EX flash was also used.
Specially for Lplate 2009. Her insect macro "force" me to empty my wallet and bought a macro len..But I never regret.
Mackay in QLD, Australia was a great place to be today. Many of the beaches and gardens were literally covered in butterflies, as though it was raining butterflies.
Photograph taken with a Canon 400D SLR camera and a Canon EF 100mm f/2.8 Macro lens. Photograph © SLR Photography Guide
RP 070111
taken with Canon EOS Rebel XSi
Canon EF-S 55-250 mm lens
with extension tubes
Rouge Park, Cedar Trail, Toronto
July 1, 2011
Black butterfly is quite common in our area but not everyone has a blue streak in their wings. I guess it has something to do with gender or age, or it could be a different species. I would appreciate if someone could identify it. The blue streak appears only on a certain angle when photographed.
Macro picture of a butterfly gently posed on a lavender flower.
Taken with Sony A330 + Tamron 90 + Photoshop CS4.
My new best butterfly friend let me get very, very close to him the other day for this shot at the community gardens.
Butterflies have always been my favorite creatures to look at and realizing that I could photograph them brought so much joy. This was so much fun to capture and it brought back a few memories As kids, my brother and I called them “seeing eye butterflies” would run around the yard trying to catch them. They were super hard to catch and we used to blame them on the eyes on their wings 😆 there’s more stories, but those will wait until I capture the respected butterfly for it 📖
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ℹ️: Junonia Coenia aka the buckeye butterfly. There are actually three types of buckeye butterflies: Common (the one pictured), mangrove, and tropical. Each butterfly has four(4) distinct eye-like markings on their wings , 2 on the forewings and 2 on the hind (one large and small). The first eyespot on each hindwing is the largest out of all of them.
The markings on the common forewings consists of two orange bars and thick white bands near the tip of the wings; mangroves have an orange band. As you can see the colors of the “eyes” are blue in the center, black, orange and yellow. The eyes on the forewings have a blue-white center surrounded by a black and yellow ring. The hind wings top eye is the largest. It’s black and blue colors are split. Many assume that these marking are used to discourage any birds that may want to try and snack on them 🐦 Have you seen these beautiful butterflies around?
#butterflies #total_butterflies #butterfliesofinstagram #butterfly_n_flower #butterflyphoto #butterfly #raw_insect #insectphotography #macrobutterfly #flora_addict #Nature #naturephoto #outdoorphotography #NaturePhotography #Nature_moods #NatureBrilliance #Nature_spotlight #Beautiful #intimacy #NatureLovers #MacroHappiness #Beautiful #Moments #top_macro #macro_in_focus #macro_brilliance #macro_perfection #Nature_brilliance
Plain tiger or African monarch is a medium-sized butterfly widespread in Asia and Africa. This butterfly is perhaps the commonest of Indian butterflies and is a familiar sight on the subcontinent. It flies from dawn to dusk, frequenting gardens, sipping from flowers and late in the day fluttering low over bushes to find a resting place for the night. The plain tiger is believed to be one of the first butterflies to be used in art. Source - Wikipedia
1) Sujeto: Retratos de una mosca / Fly portraits
2) Cámara: Sony a6000
3) Objetivo: Amscope 4x
4) Aumento: 4x
5) Config. Lente: exposición 1/15” - ISO 100 - F/-
6) Número de fotos: 35
7) Iluminación: 2 led 6W y difusor DYD
8) Procesado: Zs, PS
9) Carril: Qool rail 250
Butterfly photo taken with a Canon 400D SLR camera and a Canon EF 100mm f/2.8 Macro lens. Photograph © SLR Photography Guide
Buckeye Butterfly gathering nectar from a Purpletop Vervain as the sun is setting on the local community gardens.
RP 070410
taken with Canon EOS Rebel XSi
Canon EF-S 55-250 mm lens
July 4, 2010, Rouge Park, Toronto
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#butterfly #orange #flowers #macrophotography #flower #flowerphotography #flowersandmacro #macrobutterfly #bokeh #wildlifephotography #colorful #orangecolor
I was quite pleased with this shot. Cropped it a few times and the detail on the edges of its wings came out great!
BTW,
This butterfly is the size of the top half of your thumb, that is how small it is.
An amazing late afternoon show of butterflies, humming bird moths and humming birds at the local community gardens yesterday! If you stay still in their presence and wait for them to settle, the butterflies sort of "know" that you're not going to harm them. And then they just go about their nectar-gathering missions and let you get incredibly close. This is a Buckeye on a butterfly bush in the late day sunlight.