View allAll Photos Tagged reversemacro
Seen on a 100 rupee note. Shot with a reverse mounted 18-55 kit lens. Made a hole in the body cap and fixed a conversion ring to it to get a reverse lens adapter.
This is a double lens reverse macro shot taken with my Nikon 70-300mm VR mounted on the D80, with a male-to-male 67mm-52mm ring used to reverse mount my Nikon f/1.4 50mm to the front of the 70-300mm. I use the SB-800 off camera to get enough light. The only post processing was straightening (which meant slightly cropping) the image.
A purple polo shirt, draped over the drying pole outside.
This is a hand-held double lens reverse macro shot taken with my Nikon 70-300mm VR mounted on the D80, with a male-to-male 67mm-52mm ring used to reverse mount my Nikon f/1.4 50mm to the front of the 70-300mm. The 70-300mm is set to 300mm, meaning (300mm:50mm) that I'm shooting at 6x magnification. (The image you see here is six times smaller than the sensor on the D80.)
In order to have any sort of usable DOF, the 70-300mm was set to f/40 by the D80, while the 50mm is manually set to f/1.4 with the aperture ring. I use an SB-800 off camera to get enough light. This is the unedited JPEG image, straight out of the camera.
In order to give you a better idea of the scale of this image, this is a finely knit polo shirt.
(DSC_7671)
The skippers are commonly the small brownish butterflies that hop from flower to flower. They are characterized by relatively large eyes and closed wings at rest. Spreadwing skippers are the general exception to that rule. Was taking rest in my desk :D
Captured with hand holding reverse kit lens...
Copyright © kazi sudipto photograPHY
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Don't Use this image without the permission of the Photographer
Photo 175/365 - 24 June 2010.
This is what I will be smashing around tonight, feathers of a shuttlecock. Feeling a little nervous but at least I am not rushing around today. Elected to work from home to get my work done. Right now I am eating a light dinner and writing this up.
Aside from playing to win, I am mindful that next season I am not going to be playing full time for my team. So I am really hoping to go out on a high note after 5 years of full time commitment to them.
Interesting day in politics in Australia. Our Prime Minister has been deposed and we have our first ever female Prime Minister sworn in. Nacht der langen Messer. Interesting times ahead and that's all I will say to that now. :)
Doing photo catchups this weekend. I'm off to try and win a championship!
This is a double lens reverse macro shot taken with my Nikon 70-300mm VR mounted on the D80, with a male-to-male 67mm-52mm ring used to reverse mount my Nikon f/1.4 50mm to the front of the 70-300mm. I use the SB-800 off camera to get enough light. The only post processing was straightening (which meant slightly cropping) the image.
You can see the 50mm shot of the 500 Yen coin I used here.
05.13.09
Does this count as bokeh?
Rain on a leaf, with a 50mm reverse macro.
HBW!
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Reverse mounted Canon EF 50mm f/1.8 II, 1:1 magnification, built-in flash diffused with printer paper
This is a pretty small flower, about an inch or so in diameter. Have been wanting to take a good flower macro for awhile. I'm happy with how this turned out as a first attempt.
Reverse Macro Photography
Nikon D90
Reversed Nikkor 35-70mm (Analog Lens)
52mm Reverse Macro Ring
All work here is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 License.
creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/ph/
Lorenzo Gallardo Photography © 2009
Photo 216/365 - 4 August 2010.
Out of time!
Had the last of the birthing classes today, late dinner, late getting home, late everything. I was just setting up for a shot when the wife asked me to gift wrap some stuff for her urgently.
One of the guests from the weekend left a ciggy lighter behind and at the last minute I grabbed it and made a photo out of it.
Time to crash into bed again ... late ...
Here's another great picture i found in my Photo file and decided to upload it.
As I've said before their eyes are simply amazing things to photograph, finding this jumper under some wood seeking shelter from the rain, he looked out his little hole to get a good look at the camera before scuttling back off inside to keep well away from sight.
Taken with a 50mm Prime lens at F8 reversed on a set of macro extension tubes on a Canon550D camera body with an external flash connected to the camera via an off camera extension chord.
For a better, full view picture click here : www.flickr.com/photos/sequentialmacro/6148080603/sizes/l/...
reverse macro taken with 75-300mm mounted on body and 18-55mm reversed hence only the circular spot being visible
This is double lens reverse macro shot taken with my Nikon 70-300mm VR mounted on the D80, with a male-to-male 67mm-52mm ring used to reverse mount my Nikon f/1.4 50mm to the front of the 70-300mm. The 70-300mm is set to 300mm, meaning (300mm:50mm) that I'm shooting at 6x magnification. That means the image you see here is on a scale six times smaller than the sensor on the D80...the entire frame of this uncropped image would be approximately 3.9 x 2.6 mm, meaning every millimeter in real life is represented by just under 1,000 pixels in the full image, and a square millimeter is represented by just under a million pixels. A lot of detail for not a lot of space.)
In order to have any sort of usable DOF, the 70-300mm was set to f/40 by the D80, while the 50mm is manually set to f/1.4 with the aperture ring. As you can see, most of the bug is still very much out of focus. I use an SB-800 off camera to get enough light. This is the unedited JPEG image, straight out of the camera.
I don't even know what bug this is, but you can see the bug lying on it's back, legs twitching, in this photo. This photo is the bug's back, zoomed on on the center of it's back.
I have been watching the plants outside, delighting in each new change. The top left photo is from Jan 29th, when the first bits of green were showing. The pink appeared around Feb 25th, and today they started blooming! I was so excited! Thankfully the rain had stopped for the day
Large ant type bug climbing on a crete myrtle leaf.
Shot with pentax 24mm @ f/16 reverse mounted to a Canon 300D, 1/250, iso 400, 580ex flash at full (1/1) with stoffen omnibounce and home made macro diffuser (side of plastic 1 gal milk jug - extending from lens to above flash head).
Uncropped
A Pentium 4 through two lenses. The attached lens is an AF-D Nikkor 18-135 @ 135mm f/5.6 and an manual Nikkor 35-70 is handheld in front of it @70mm f/4.5.
Reverse Macro Photography
Nikon D90
Reversed Nikkor 35-70mm (Analog Lens)
52mm Reverse Macro Ring
All work here is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 License.
creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/ph/
Lorenzo Gallardo Photography © 2009
Inspired by Brian aka bojangles_1953. Since I don't have a real macro lens or extension tubes I used my reverse macro filter to mount my 50mm lens on backwards. It gives a macro effect, but with a very narrow depth of field, which is why mine are not as sharp throughout as Brian's are.
Bee having a fabulous pollen bath!!
I real joy to watch and know that these little guys are out there doing their jobs so the rest of us can enjoy are bountiful harvest. . . .
Reverse macro : hand held using Minolta 50mm - the 49mm diameter fits beautifully into my canon mount!
Trying out reverse macro technique, aka poor man's macro.
Using my 18-55mm IS f3.5-5.6 Kit lens and my broken 50mm.
Canon Rebel XTi
Lenses: 50mm 1.8 and 18-55mm f3.5-5.6 (Kit)
Tripod used.
Canon Speedlie 580 EX II
Technique: Reverse Macro withtwo lenses: 50mm mounted @ f1.8 and 18-55 hand-held at 18mm wide open.
The entire object is actually around 0.5cm in diameter (yes about the size of your pinky nail). I really didnt have much idea but i thought it is a good chance for me to explore other techniques. (this technique was actually introduced by JH in our previous photo challenge).
PP- Desaturation and Sharpen in LR2; reduce vignetting; Crop
PP- Clone and smooth the center of the heart to remove all dents and scratches.
Reverse Macro with 18-55mm.
I had a hard time identifying this insect. Its some kind of Vine Weevil I guess but not sure which one exactly. It feeds at night on the outer edges of leaves, causing the leaves to have a notched margin.
Order: Coleoptera
Family: Curculionidae
Genus: Unknown
Species: Unknown
Picture taken from Circuit House garden, Chandpur.
After the stormtrooper yesterday it had to be old Darth himself. Lego head, about 1cm wide.
reverse macro - turn the lens around
This is a photo I took some time ago, but have only just got round to uploading. At the time, I took a couple of different angles, one side on, and this one. I didn't originally upload this photo, as it contains focus banding when viewed at 100%, but having recently stumbled across it in my photos, I decided to upload it anyway.