View allAll Photos Tagged micro
Glenn Gould-J.S. Bach-The Art of Fugue (HD).
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Canon 600d
Bague d'adaptation Canon/Leica
Leitz Elmarit -r 2.8/90
Bonnette Leitz Elpro vII b
Merci pour votre visite et commentaires.
Thanks for your visit and comments.
Micro (macro) photographs of lit candles, showcasing the amazing art that's produced when a candle's wick burns and the candle's wax melts into incredible shapes.
The heptagon is the seven-sided shape produced, I believe, as an artifact via reflection or captured lens flare from my camera's lens.
It took me awhile to be able to expose properly for both the burning wick and the flame itself, and it's challenging to get a sharp focus as I shoot these handheld.
Click on the photo to view it large and better see the amazing details.
More in my album, "The Art of the Flame:"
www.flickr.com/photos/motorpsiclist/albums/72177720306094528
I hope you enjoy.
Teeny Weeny, upside down hover fly feasting on a lily stamen.
Worth a double click zoom - I've upscaled it x2 so you could better see the pollen in his mouth though for some reason the upscale version on here doesn't seem to zoom any more than the normal version on my pc, so not much point :^))
I was simply trying to photograph the Lily when I decided to get a bit closer and see if anything turned up.....and of course, it did :^)
Reflected in the dewdrop which is hanging down from one of my other plants is a potted tomato plant, and one of my house's windows. The dewdrop wasn't much larger than the size of a paper match head! Micro (macro) photo...click on it to view larger.
"All those golden autumn days the sky was full of wings. Wings beating low over the blue water of Silver Lake, wings beating high in the blue air far above it . . . bearing them all away to the green fields in the South."
Laura Ingalls Wilder
...on my power charger to connect with my mobile phone
[Dedicated to CRA (ILYWAMHASAM)]
Macro taken March 7, 2025 and uploaded for the groups
Macro Mondays #Socket
and
😄 Happy Macro Monday 😄
Gigaset GS 290
Æ’/2.0
3.5 mm
1/100Sec
ISO 186
Click on the photo to see the details more clearly.
This is a micro (macro) photograph of the pollen in a little Purslane flower.
Punaise nébuleuse (Rhaphigaster nebulosa)
2 clichés à voir !
Longue de 14 à 16 millimètres. Ses nombreuses taches brunes caractéristiques sur la membrane des ailes lui ont valu son qualificatif de "nébuleuse". Le nom du genre "Raphigaster" venant du grec raphis, aiguille et gaster, ventre en raison de l'aiguille qu'ont sur le ventre les espèces de ce genre. La punaise nébuleuse, Rhaphigaster nebulosa, est facilement reconnaissable à ses antennes annelées de blanc à la base des articles III, IV et V, et à sa forte épine ventrale dirigée vers la tête.
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Merci beaucoup à toutes et tous pour votre visite, commentaire et appréciation. Je vous souhaite une belle journée!
Thank you very much to everyone for your visit, comment and appreciation. I wish you a nice day!
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