Bees and Things
Rob Pauza
Registered Users Posts: 119 Major grins
Hello folks. I just tried my hand at some macro bugs tonight and thought I'd show the results. I had a few Speed light issues I was fighting with, but I was somewhat surprised when I looked at them later. I definitely see room for improvement. I guess practice makes perfect. Comments and critiques welcome. Thanks for looking.
Sigma EX 150mm 1:1 Macro
-Rob
And a few dandelions while I was outside:
Sigma EX 150mm 1:1 Macro
-Rob
And a few dandelions while I was outside:
-Rob Pauza
Rob Pauza Photography
Rob Pauza Photography
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Comments
Brian v.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/lordv/
http://www.lordv.smugmug.com/
If I may ask, what settings are a good place to start (in a typical daytime, overcast lighting scenario)?
I was trying to keep shutter speed at least 1/200, f16 or so, 1250 ISO. My speed light display was doing a weird blinking thing so I'm not totally sure what it was firing at. (I was too lazy to go get my other one) My guess is that it was about 1/4 power.
Thanks again,
-Rob
Rob Pauza Photography
For natural light shooting I tend to use shutter priority mode, with at least 1/200th and adjust ISO to get the aperture- say F8 to F11. This is for handheld .
I more normally shoot full flash with camera in manual, flash in ETTL, 1/200th, ISO100/200,F11.
Brian v.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/lordv/
http://www.lordv.smugmug.com/
Rob Pauza Photography
Dear colleagues,
I am looking for an HD movie with close up of the Osmia Rufa or other Osmia bees which crawl in or out of their nest in a wooden / bamboo stick. Youtube videos are not suitable.
Who can help me?
Sincerely,
Jeroen Verspuij
when they are not fully warmed up by the sun , they often stay still , because they CANNOT move
insects are cold-blooded ; they need warmth from external source ( sun ) to be able to move
little side-note on this
just shoot them , but further leave them alone
if you scare them too much they might die of exhaustion , because they may panic
/ɯoɔ˙ƃnɯƃnɯs˙ʇlɟsɐq//:dʇʇɥ