Well the good news is im going to be published The bad news is ive got to suss out how to take the sodding picture .
A local bee keeping expert has written a book and asked me to use my expertise (HA HA) to take pictures for the book. I have explained that this isnt my area and although i have the gear, i do in fact have no idea on how to use it in this discipline ... The good thing is i came in at the right price... free... Having had no time to practice i accompanied the keeper out today to " have a go " failed miserably but learnt a thing or two...
So i thought id pick the real experts brains on here and ask for opinions on how to achieve what the keeper wants .... below are a couple of today's captures as you can see they didnt turn out very well.
the kit Im using is as follows
Nikon D800
Nikor 105 f2.8 macro
2x sb200 on lens mount with diffusers
First image shot at f13, 100iso, 1/30 Flash set ttl +1ev
Second image shot at f8 100 iso 1/30 flash set ttl + 1ev
Now im sitting here analysing my results and the shoot in general and noted the following points:
Shooting in a bee suit is a pain in the ass.
I hate bees and am scared s***less of them.... unfortunate as my wife keeps them....
Bee suit v hot sweat dripping into eyes maybe wear a sweatband?
Sun was out... pick a shady day ( i should know better but as i was just practicing it wasnt important)
In order to follow the queen around the frame the keeper had to hand hold it and turn it around and i had to re compose each time
Basically because it was such a new environment to me and i was NOT comfortable with thousands of stinging insects flying around, i forgot all of my basic photographic principles! Not once during the shoot did i think to up my ISO to get a faster shutter speed.... I fixated on the flash freezing the action but didnt think about there being too much ambient for that to happen .
So what i need to do is to achieve shots with the above composition, and for the next shoot im thinking of using 2 x sb900 on stands with pocket wizards, set them 3/4 feet apart and ask the keeper to move the frame only in the area between the flashes.... Ill try to come up with a way of mounting them to the camera but with anything other that the built in diffuser this will be hard to use.
I think i might be better using a longer focal distance and rather than getting realy close shoot from 4 feet or so and use the d800 massive files to crop in, this should increase my DOF and allow for focusing margin.
Any tips on lighting, shooting settings, technique and anything else much appreciated. Thanks