For a few weeks I have had brownish orange large butterflies flying around me but none would stop and pose for a portrait. Probably males desperately patrolling their chosen patch looking for females and keeping out other males.
I suspected they were Silver-washed Fritillaries but needed confirmation; then, yesterday, one of the more obliging females dropped into a nearby bramble bush but between the leaves and it kept moving about while feeding from the flowers. So I had to go hand held and try to find a suitable gap in the foliage. That gave me some images like this.
7D with Sigma 180 macro lens 1/200 F14 Iso 400. Flash used. Manual focus hand held.
That may be artistically acceptable but I need to see the wing underside for identity confirmation. There were a few wing flicks which briefly showed the underside but I messed up and over exposed them. So this is probably the best of the angles which show those silvery streaks among the greenish tints.
I was now trying without the flash and at F16 so my shutter speed dropped dangerously low for such a heavy lens at 1/125.
And a few other oddities. This little 5 mm bug was running around on an umbellifer head which was also moving in the wind. I was on a tripod but my manual focusing kept getting me 1 second behind the action.
1/200 F14 Iso 400 with flash.
This rather strange looking caterpillar is an Alder Moth.
The clash between black and bright yellow meant I kept either getting over or under exposed so eventually I turned off the flash, went to aperture priority and did a burst with 3 exposures and merged the best of the three but the slowest option turned out to be 1/60 F11 Iso 800 which was on the limit of acceptable settings.
Meadow Grasshoppers are normally variations of green with a few occasional other tints but this one was an unusual chocolate colour. A last stage nymph by the look of it.
Back to 1/200 F11 Iso 400 on a tripod with flash.