No George, Lesson 1 is to determine Izzie's capability and patience to shoot and reshoot bugs until she gets good at it enough to join the bug shooting club. Of course gears is just one of the requirement as a 70-300mm is useless in this situation and of course flash and other kind of lights...both natural and man-produced.
I only copied the EXIF info from On-One this time around because of reasons I have explained to Grahame awhile ago...I was shooting inside the house in my kitchenette in the late afternoon. The shutter speed is the result of the ceiling fan and the movement of the bug. My only light light was the one coming in from the deck door and it was a cloudy day. I do not want to use my flash so I got a little tiny flashlight (not even an LED one) near the kitchen window. I only grab what is near where I can get it. because my gear/accessories shelves is upstairs. The bug was alive and I fear that if I turned my back it might fly away. I do not know what sort of bug it is and I do not want it lurking around the house...IT IS a bug for crying out loud...I have to accept that I will have one or two or even more lurking around here somewhere despite vacuuming twice a week. The two dogs are/might be bringing some of them inside too. I am sure they do but I do not want to think of it.
My system is that I mix my ISO, SS, and aperture to get my EV to move to the middle so if my shot is dark, I move either two left or right and see how I go, take another shot until I am satisfied I got it right. I cull in camera which ones I do not like, keep the passable ones. I have a zoom and un-zoom option at the back of my camera to check sharpness or passable ones at least to a point. I also watch my histogram and getting good at it too lately.
I have lower than 100 on all of my Nikon cameras including the D810. My setting is right on where I am and what I am doing, it is my way of shooting that was wrong and this is what I reckon is wrong. That is why I need help.
I once read an article about Exposure Triangle that says that you have to balance the SS, Aperture and ISO together to get a good shot. But always make sure that your EV is right in the middle each time, take a shot with one in the middle, then move either of the three in the triangle left or right to get your image right. In a dark environment, use a high ISO, in a windy environment, use higher SS and if you choose the Aperture to get depth of field right, adjust either ISO or Shutter speed. This article that i read changed the way I was using my camera and the way i shoot. Worse comes to worst, I look at my histogram, too much to the left, I move my ET to the right and vice versa. Or watch my RGB highlights...even if sometimes, a little bit of highlight does not hurt.