Bugs by the river
pinarello65
Registered Users Posts: 5 Beginner grinner
I think this might be my first image post on Dgrin although joined the forums a while ago. So here goes...some of you may remember my nick from FM forums, as I recognise yours.
Currently I have 3 macro lenses, the Sigma 180mm f/2.8, Nikon 105 f/2.8 VR & Nikon 55mm AIS f/3.5
I shoot with a Nikon D800E.
These were D800E+180+just one SB-R200 mounted at front of lens on a ring & just using the diffuser cap they come with. I live right next to a river so can just walk out the back gate, down an embankment and I'm there. There is always something to shoot.
I'm interested in comments where I'm at with this. I shoot RAW, PP involves some initial tweaks in Lightroom on the white/black/exposure/highlights/shadows sliders & then typically I move to Photoshop. If I do any sharpening I use OnOne Plugin suite, quite often their progressive sharpening filter. Sometimes the dynamic contrast filter is useful too.
These were handheld @ around f/11, 1/320s, ISO100. I figure I need to do more with lighting & specifically diffusion. I've also got a SB-900 flash & 2 more SB-R200's. But with the SB-900 I'm lacking brackets (suggestions? And I will note I'm hopeless at home made things) to get it in a good position but I've got a couple of diffusers I can use with it, made by Lumiquest, the Promax kit and a larger Softbox.
This camera/lens combo is quite weighty so I sometimes pop a monopod on to give the arms a rest & use that to stabilise things. If I find my subject moves in a way requiring a monopod length adjustment, sometimes I'll just clamp the monopod between my legs instead. It's not as steady as when grounded but steadier than just hand holding.
Comments welcome.
Carl
Currently I have 3 macro lenses, the Sigma 180mm f/2.8, Nikon 105 f/2.8 VR & Nikon 55mm AIS f/3.5
I shoot with a Nikon D800E.
These were D800E+180+just one SB-R200 mounted at front of lens on a ring & just using the diffuser cap they come with. I live right next to a river so can just walk out the back gate, down an embankment and I'm there. There is always something to shoot.
I'm interested in comments where I'm at with this. I shoot RAW, PP involves some initial tweaks in Lightroom on the white/black/exposure/highlights/shadows sliders & then typically I move to Photoshop. If I do any sharpening I use OnOne Plugin suite, quite often their progressive sharpening filter. Sometimes the dynamic contrast filter is useful too.
These were handheld @ around f/11, 1/320s, ISO100. I figure I need to do more with lighting & specifically diffusion. I've also got a SB-900 flash & 2 more SB-R200's. But with the SB-900 I'm lacking brackets (suggestions? And I will note I'm hopeless at home made things) to get it in a good position but I've got a couple of diffusers I can use with it, made by Lumiquest, the Promax kit and a larger Softbox.
This camera/lens combo is quite weighty so I sometimes pop a monopod on to give the arms a rest & use that to stabilise things. If I find my subject moves in a way requiring a monopod length adjustment, sometimes I'll just clamp the monopod between my legs instead. It's not as steady as when grounded but steadier than just hand holding.
Comments welcome.
Carl
0
Comments
although the sw11 diffusers are great , i only use them for real close ( around 1;1 or so )
for longer distance i use pager towel or bare flash
# 1/320 is way to slow
better you
- use faster shutterspeed , or
- shoot at 1/200 so that flash freezes motion
because ; above 1/200 you have fast-sync , wich not freezes motion
hope it helps
images above are nice , nothing wrong with IMO , although last one has a lousy background
/ɯoɔ˙ƃnɯƃnɯs˙ʇlɟsɐq//:dʇʇɥ
With shots of larger bugs like this I would tend to just use natural light unless they were rather backlit where I might use a bit of fill flash.
As far as diffusers go I would have thought the lumiquest softbox would be fine.
Brian V.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/lordv/
http://www.lordv.smugmug.com/