View allAll Photos Tagged reversemacro
Istorya.net macro EB2
Identification
Cockroaches in the Ellipsidion genus are more attractively marked than the despised introduced cockroaches commonly seen in and around the house. This species has tan and brown markings.
they feel soft, they smell soft!!
they are divine. . .
Carols rose garden.
Reverse macro 50mm hand held, no adapter
Yesterday I was reading the flickr blog entry about Reverse Lens Photography (http://blog.flickr.net/en/2010/05/07/turn-your-lenses-upside-down/) and got inspired to put together my Canon 70-200mm L 4f with my Tamron 28-200mm 3.8-5.6 and this is one of the results.
More on my blog:
Macros taken with a 100mm Macro lens coupled with a reversed 50mm prime lens for extra magnification.
I found myself bored at home back in Sabah. Grabbed my D40+ BR-2A reversing ring+ 55-200mm and went snapping around my house compound.
The shape reminds me of Bahamut from Final Fantasy .
anyways, it was too darn sunny. gonna rest up for the evening. ;)
There's really no need for a description. I took it on Tuesday and it speaks for itself. Did this with a reverse macro and some fun in post processing.
I found my cats all sitting on my bed with their claws oddly outstretched. So I flipped a lens to the reverse position and did this spontaneous macro.
I was using the reverse fast lens on a zoom lens macro technique (don't have a clue what to actually call it). Basically used my 50mm wide open and hand held and backwards at the end of my kit lens. The DOF is so narrow when doing this that it takes a lot of patience (for me anyways) to get anything in focus.
147/365
This is a little dragonfly I found in my garden this morning. I took these in reverse style with my 18-55 mm lens and blasted him at least 100 times with my flash, I'm pretty sure he is blind now.
Reverse macro of Abraham Lincoln's eye on a $5 bill. I used a 50mm 1.8 Nikkor turned backwards with a reversing ring on a 55-200mm VR Nikon. Cheap way to get closeups!