Nasseem
You might be interested in the photography of Thomas Shahan. It looks like you are on the way to following him.
I won't try to critique your photo on this monitor.
R
Well Raylee this is my first successful attempt at super Macro. I love the final result but would love to hear from other members. Yes, I have seen Thomas's photostream and if mine are anywhere near as good as his Ill be a very happy macrophotographer. Its hard to love the subject matter ie the head of a fly but one can only be fascinated by revealing those secrets: the perfect colour combinations, the intricate structure compound eyes, mandibles, wings etc. Natures full of wonders and I feel sorry for people who cant see and worse still are not interested in any of it.
Nasseem
I like it that you were able to get that intensely close, but think in doing so, you set up the perfect opportunity to oversaturate the color becuase there isn't a lot of room to spread the pixels out for a more even distribution of color range. I might suggest a lesser intensity of light source...perhaps a more reflected fill light would be enough to still capture the image but not enough to cause such a garish light resposne.
That's one really ugly bug!
If this is your first attempt, then the sky's the limit! I love this sort of photography even though I hate spiders etc when I see them. The macro work shows them in a light that removes them from my phobias. I find them fascinating as macro subjects.
It seems that Thomas Shahan uses focus stacking on his macros. This makes sense given the limited depth of field. It also requires a lot of patience!
R
Thank you Chris. I did add a lot of contrast but not so much saturation in PP. As for the light I used a flash
but without a
proper diffuser (used an omnibounce plastic cover for the flash). I will change that now that I got my real
diffuser. Strangely I love the colours in it!!! I am absolutely chuffed with the results. You have no idea how
I felt yesterday capturing these 4 different bugs without a tripod. I felt I won the lottery.
Well Chris at least I am a step closer to the real thing.
Your advice is much appreciated and I thank you.
Nasseem
Last edited by maloufn; 10th March 2011 at 08:15 AM.
Raylee this is not a spider but a fly. I thought Id water a section of my garden on the day. All of a sudden I had a flux of beautiful small flies resting on these leaves drinking and taking in the sun. They were having a ball and I, to say the least, enjoyed shooting them. Yes, Thomas does do focus stacking which is very hard to do with jumping insects. If you are lucky to get one to stay still for long enough then you will have the perfect opportunity. None of mine were focus stacked by the way so there is room for improvement particularly with a diffuser and the flash placed in the right place.
Nasseem
You say this is a hand-held shot? What flash was used? What other technical specs can you share?
- Bill
Hi Bill As described above I used a 100mm Macro on extension tubes (32mm) with a 580 ex2 flash on the camera with an omnibounce diffuser. It was hand held but they were behaving well drinking from the watered leaves. I did not focus stack at all- something I should do if they stay still for long enough. This is very dificult photography
and it is your luck on the day. I was very lucky then. I might not get the same opportunity for a while. Try watering your garden on a hot day and sit back and see what comes around. I hope that helps. Nasseem
Can't see the pic thanks to the firewall at work but I would warn against handheld focus stacks.....a trained eye often sees missing bits of focus in many of them, even when only displayed at screen resolution.
They might look pretty from a distance but handheld stacks rarely hold up to close inspection.
Excellent first attempt, wonderful composition, colour, great focus and good depth of field. The reduction in contrast in the amended picture saves the image somewhat. However the highlights are still blown out (the hairs on the face and the face in front of the eye in particular). I suspect you will have much better results with the diffuser. Insects are highly reflective so care is needed with the lighting
Very impressive otherwise
Nasseem,
I definitely understand how you feel about your shots not being popular. I think that not a lot of people really like seeing bugs close up. I for one do like them. I'm a definite fan!
I was wondering - how much cropping do you do on these shots?
- Bill
Nasseem,
This second one really caught my eye, the only problem is you didn't catch the fly's eye, in focus that is.
-Sonic
Yes, it is my sad experience that while people will say 'great shot' that never (well, rarely) makes any macro shot a winner in an 'open' competition.
I think to win, an image has to hold the viewer's attention and also be of a subject they can relate to and want to look at often - explaining why landscapes and cute animal or kids pix often win.
Compared to those; something that is fascinating, but you wouldn't want physically touching you, has an inbuilt aversion factor.
Yes I can understand that Dave but people dont realize how hard it is technically to capture a little critter like this. It is easy to say this or that is not in focus but try and focus on something that is constantly moving jumping hand held. Id love people to try it. Its an experience. Neverthe less, I think we could be inspired by the colours and structures of such despised creatures like flies.
Nasseem