View allAll Photos Tagged macrolicious
Upon my return I discovered that you showed interest in my photos. Thank you for the encouragement and and 30,000+ views and 10,000+ comments. The return may very much be like a new start
A pair of rings with distinct designs on each side, captured in macro to highlight their intricate details. The contrasting textures and reflections make for an interesting perspective, perfect for Macro Mondays.
The male emperor moth. It has to be said that this is, without doubt, one of the most beautiful of UK moths. Unlike most moths, this one flies by day and, given its size and colour, you could be forgiven for thinking it is a butterfly. In the last two years I have been fortunate, using the female pheromone, to lure a single male to my garden in Aberaeron each year but, yesterday, I was blessed with three males; this one was photographed and all released.
17 handheld images stacked in Zerene
leaf hoppers on a leaf (how droll) a very short DOF with only the raised portion of the leaf and the head of the bottom leaf hopper in focus. But it works for me.
42nd Imagoism Thursday
Our tribute to a very talented artist and wonderful friend, imago2007
on Explore!
This is a photo stack of 20 images to create this much depth in a macro photo. Each shot with a slightly different focus point. The camera is locked down and then it is slid forward by tiny, controlled movements of macro focus slider. The copper wire sculpture is all of about 2 inches tall. The flower in the background is only about 3 to 4 inches away from the wire structure with is sitting in a bucket of water to help finish the scene.
Its hard to set this all up and everything is very small movements and if you accidentally kick a tripod leg of a light stand, everything gets changed in a big way. It can be very frustrating to work like this, but this is the result when it all comes together.
Shot using a Tokina AT-X 90mm f2.5 Macro lens and a 25mm Canon FD extension tube.
from the archives-- aren't weeds beautiful? this is chicory and grows in abundance along our roadsides.
Please view large if you like.
Macro Mondays, Redux 2022, need to find a photo to one of the themes of 2022. The list of all themes and some more statistics can be found here , www.flickr.com/groups/macromonday/discuss/72157721915254700/
Since there is so much to choose, sharp, Monday 19th September seems to be an obvious choice. I am sure the Hornhauthobel or callus scraper is able to remove something.
Curves, Monday 11th of November seems to 9
Not to forget Reflections, as on Monday 4th. The white as you see it, is mostly the reflection of the soft box on the highly reflective surface
So, and since it’s quite hard to estimate the size, the removable scrapper part is in total approx. 6 x 3 cm. But on display are approx. 2.5 x 1.25 cm.
That doesn’t make sense to estimate 0.5 mm says my engineering mind, but that’s when you split 1 mm.
Other than this, single monolight with a large softbox with an inner and outer white cover to soften the light.
Feel free to leave comments and constructive feedback. No P1/C1 or seen in group and similar.
~Proverb
Lavendar: This shot from a late-afternoon walk yesterday proves two things: I do know some flowers...and not all florals need to be shot in macro format. :)
Would you like to read the paper?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
© Steven Brisson. Do not use without permission.