Originally Posted by
Mike Buckley
Thanks to everyone for your help in the thread! I have finally come to the following executive decision:
I will use two terms, close-up and super close-up, to catalog my images made in the style having to do with relatively large magnification of relatively small objects. The term, close-up, will be used to very subjectively tag images that typically have the look and feel of that style when made using only a standard lens (no macro lens, no extension tubes, etc.). The term, super close-up, will be used to tag images that have the look and feel of that style made in a higher magnification typically requiring using a macro lens, extension tubes and/or the like.
Purely as a matter of my own interest, I will also note the approximate magnification ratio of super close-up photos in the image file's metadata. Doing so will allow me to consider that information one image at a time or to conduct a search of all images made at a particular magnification ratio or range of magnification ratios. I am new at making images that would be tagged as super close-up, but my guess at this point is that images that have that look and feel will be made at a magnification ratio of about 1:5 or higher.
Notice that I decided the term, macro, is not to be used for cataloging purposes despite that that was my initial intention when I started the thread. That decision is rooted in the observation that almost all relevant use of the term has to do with how manufacturers market their lenses, not with any decisions a photographer would make before releasing the shutter. For those who limit the definition of macro photography to be photos made at a magnification ratio of 1:1 or higher, consider the macro lens that achieves that magnification but no higher, which is the typical macro lens. That means in practical terms that only about 1% of the magnification ratios achieved when using that lens produce macro images. If 99% of the hair on a horse was white and 1% was brown, we wouldn't call it a brown horse. So, I understand why manufacturers include the lower magnification ratios such as 1:2 and even lower in the range that justifies calling their lenses macro lenses; without including those lower magnification ratios, we would be calling my lens a macro lens when only 1% of its capabilities produces images made at 1:1.