Portrait of a Lady
Bend The Light
Registered Users Posts: 1,887 Major grins
These are not wild...we bought a kit with some caterpillars and all we needed to "make" Painted Lady butterflies. The kids love it, and I also got my macro set up out for the first time in a couple of years...
Here are a few shots, shot with M42 Vivitar 90mm f2.8 1:1 Macro lens and a variety of extension tubes. Cheapo ring flash.
12Apr2014_Crysalid splitting by Bend The Light, on Flickr
14Apr2014 Number 3 by Bend The Light, on Flickr
14Apr2014 First Born by Bend The Light, on Flickr
14Apr2014 First Born close Up by Bend The Light, on Flickr
14Apr2014 Portrait of a Lady by Bend The Light, on Flickr
Quite pleased with them.
Here are a few shots, shot with M42 Vivitar 90mm f2.8 1:1 Macro lens and a variety of extension tubes. Cheapo ring flash.
12Apr2014_Crysalid splitting by Bend The Light, on Flickr
14Apr2014 Number 3 by Bend The Light, on Flickr
14Apr2014 First Born by Bend The Light, on Flickr
14Apr2014 First Born close Up by Bend The Light, on Flickr
14Apr2014 Portrait of a Lady by Bend The Light, on Flickr
Quite pleased with them.
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Comments
#2 would have been great....but the grill-pattern in bokeh is not working for me. JMO.
I have learned from Lord V (Brian), that color cards turn any background into fabulous background! Cheers!
Brian V.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/lordv/
http://www.lordv.smugmug.com/
While reading up about the process, it seems any small interference can cause the butterflies problems on emergence - indeed, we have one that got caught up in a few strands of silk left over from the crysalis spinning stage. This led to him not pumping up his wings properly. He also had difficulty bringing the two sides of his proboscis together to form the tube it uses for feeding. It may not feed properly.
Since this is the case, I have tried to be as careful as possible when photographing, and have left them comfortably in the habitat. Hence the mesh. As they are gaining strenght (although we are still waiting for one to emerge) I will try to get better photos without the mesh.
Thanks Brian.
Thank you.
The first is the butterfly that didn't emerge properly - you can see his proboscis is in two parts, so he is finding it difficult to feed, I think.
16Apr2014 Poorly Butterfly by Bend The Light, on Flickr
16Apr2014 Feeding by Bend The Light, on Flickr
16Apr2014 Feeding portrait by Bend The Light, on Flickr
We also released the invalid butterfly - he wouldn't fly as his wings were not formed properly - and I doubt he would survive even if we kept him. Sadly, the ants took him while he was in the strawberry patch.
A great experience, though..and we plan to repeat it later. First though, we are going to send a batch of caterpillars to my daughter's class at school - they can watch some butterflies develop too.
1. A bit of sun before release:
18Apr2014 In the sun by Bend The Light, on Flickr
2. A bit of juice for the journey:
18Apr2014 Feeding by Bend The Light, on Flickr
3. On the brink...ready to fly:
18Apr2014 Ready to fly by Bend The Light, on Flickr
4. Annie (age 5) releases the invalid butterfly:
18Apr2014 Annie releases the invalid by Bend The Light, on Flickr
5. The invalid butterfly, before the anys took him:
18Apr2014 Poor thing by Bend The Light, on Flickr
Thanks for reading the thread.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/devil_macro
Thank you.