View allAll Photos Tagged reversemacro

Nature photos taken with a makeshift "double-lens reverse macro", in which I attached two 50mm f1.8 lenses face to face.

Since there is still freezing rain falling outside, I took out my marbles and took some reverse macro images of them. I think they turned out pretty neat, the colors remind me of a water color painting in a way.

handheld reverse macro with no adapter, Nippon Kogaku 35/2.0

Istorya.net macro EB2

  

Identification

The Hibiscus Harlequin Bug is brightly coloured bug with metallic sheen. The body is shield shaped. Males and females are different colours - females are mostly orange and males are blue and red.

 

Other Names

Cotton Harlequin Bug

 

Size

20mm

 

Habitat

Urban areas, agricultural areas, coastal areas

 

Food

These bugs feed on many species of the hibiscus family (Malvaceae), including ornamental hibiscus and cotton. It feeds on the young shoots, piercing the stems and sucking the sap.

 

source: ozanimals

Captured by Canon EF-S 18-55mm IS lens in reverse at 18mm....

 

Your comments and suggestions are highly appreciated..

Canon EOS 50D

Taken: July 12, 2010, 8:29:26PM

Aperture: F/1.8

Shutter Speed: 1/125 sec

Focal Length: 50mm

ISO: 100

Lens: 50mm/1.8

Reverse Macro

Edited in Paint Shop Pro Photo X2

Taken with a canon t2i with a reversed 18-55mm kit lens and a home made flash diffuser on the pop up flash!

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

The Harry Houdini of snails! Death defying act (sort of).

 

I was actually washing vegetables in the sink for dinner tonight when I spotted this guy in the water. Initially I thought it was dead but it actually stuck it's head out of its shell underwater so I fished it out of the water. Drowning is a horrible way to go no matter what species you are I suppose.

 

When I saw it stuck it's head out again on the side of my sink, I knew it was photo op time. Tell you what it is pretty shy when it's been picked up and moved around. It took a long time for it to pop it's head out again and decide to make a quick get away. They can actually move when they want to!

 

These are all reverse macro shots, some with my nifty fifty, some with my 70-200mm at 70mm. Please look at the set here.

Portraits of Russian nesting dolls - from largest to smallest.

 

(Reverse macro - 55mm/2.8f Rikenon lens held up to a Nikon 50mm 1.8f on a d50)

Canon EOS 50D

Taken: July 11, 2010, 6:26:23PM

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

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

Not my best work, but not to bad for no flash and before the sunrise. A little noisy tho.

Taken with a canon t2i with a reversed 18-55mm kit lens and a home made flash diffuser on the pop up flash! Help with I.D. is appreciated.

just a quick one tonight - a reverse macro of a pencil sharpener. sorry, i am sooo behind with comments - i will try to catch up soon, please bare with me :-)

got a reverse macro adaptor ring for my 50mm lens and it's awesome. This was a mistake but I kinda liked how it turned out

the whole lot could easily fit into a bottle top. yep, it's reverse macro again

Taken with reversed 50mm lens and 52mm ring

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

Alternate shot to Day 286.

 

Take by reverse lens macro technique. I was very lucky this guy did not move.

A close up of the clay.

Like the texture of light and waves on the reflections.

Reverse mount macro shot with a Vivitar 28-70mm zoom on a Canon 600D. For a quick how to see my blog at: teach-me-photo.blogspot.co.nz/2012/02/using-zoom-for-macr...

10/Jul/2014

Taken with Canon EOS700D + kit lens (reverse macro)

  

Water droplets on an orange. First attempt in using reverse ring with 18-55 kit lens

Photo 140/365 - 20 May 2010.

 

This is about how I feel at the moment. The last week's worth of 365 photos have kind of tripped a switch in my head and I feel comfortable changing shooting styles and compositions away from what I would have done in the past.

 

I feel free to explore and try to get some photos which I can only imagine in my head previously, like getting macros, more details, etc now that I understand how I can go about it. So it takes quite a few goes sometimes, but I am one step closer to achieving those shots.

 

Today instead of doing another landscape shot I decided to do a reverse macro of my notebook's power button. It's constantly staring at me like it wants me to make it look different. :)

Press 'esc' or perish.

i really wanted to make this shot better but i have a million and one things to do tonight. tomorrow, my parents arrive from new zealand for a visit and this week has been so stressful i am really unorganised. the next couple of weeks are going to be hard for me - i dont think i am going to have the time to dedicate to 365 but i am really going to try to post something, even if i hate it.

found a dead wasp, so decided to use a reverse macro technique plus focus stacking to shoot a high magnification image. I also used a bit of generative fill while editing this to help clean up the image. Sped up the workflow a lot. This kind of technique is fun, but not good for serious work (at least with my lenses) as it generates a ton of chromatic aberration.

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