View allAll Photos Tagged reversemacro
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
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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.
i'm selling high-quality prints of this for a low price, feel free to shoot me a flickrmail if you're interested and from europe :)
Another for the 52:2012 groups weekly theme of liquid. This was taken using the reverse macro technique.
+1 in comments
Very small Pink flower bud was growing on my backyard. I couldn't stop myself from trying to picture this from my 35mm 1.8G reversed with reverse ring adapter.
The Daily Shoot
Today’s Daily Shoot assignment is:
Make a photograph of something shiny today.
Get out there, take a photograph, upload it, and tweet a link to @dailyshoot with the hashtag: #ds507
"Poor-mans Macro" - Taken using a reversed 50mm lens held in front of a G11.
Hand held too. Bumped into some double poor sod attempting the same with a add-on magnifying lens. Double poor as he'd bought the Olympus e420 to do it with...
A reverse macro shot of a daisy seedling growing in a peet disc in our front window.
Lens: snipurl.com/i1js5
Canon EOS 50D
Taken: September 15, 2010, 6:26:04PM
Aperture: F/1.8
Shutter Speed: 1/500 sec
Focal Length: 50mm
ISO: 100
Lens: 50mm/1.8
Reverse Macro
Edited in Paint Shop Pro Photo X2
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.
ok so day 2 of macro... handheld reversed asahi pentax 2.8 28mm, neewer video light, and no teleconverter
Flame and wick of an tea candle. Photo was taken with an reverse ring and the standard Canon KIT 18-55mm lens.
Large ant type bug checking out some crete myrtle pods.
Shot with pentax 28mm @ 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
Photo 297/365 - 24 October 2010.
I have been eyeing off this cologne for the better part of a year and a half. Coming into summer here I finally I bit the bullet and bought it.
Artisan is a citrus herbal fragrance. The notes feature clementines, tangelo fruit, Mexican winter mandarin oranges, thyme, marjoram, lavendin, orange blossom, murraya (aka orange jasmine or orange jessamine), ginger, kephalis, georgywood, belambre and serenolide.
The other thing about this bottle is the hand woven rattan that you can just see in this capture. Well, allegedly hand woven, they do not really provide much detail of that.
Table salt, taken with a 50mm prime lens reverse mounted on the end of a 55mm zoom, lit from the side with a halogen utility light. Part of a series of salt macros I shot playing around with my new reverse mount adapter.
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