Stranger in the Night: Cockchafer
e6filmuser
Registered Users Posts: 3,379 Major grins
One evening in June I was working on my PC. It was getting dark outside and I had not turned on the room light. I felt a breeze on my cheek as something moved past me and settled on the curtain. It was this Cockchafer. I took it to our conservatory, hoping it would not fly. In semi darkness, I placed it on a tomato leaf.
I grabbed my E-M1 camera, Kiron 105mm (set to f11) macro and twin flash. I kept the light quite dim, such that only this shot had fully acceptable focus. I left one claw out of the frame but not bad for an unplanned shot. :thumb
Harold
I grabbed my E-M1 camera, Kiron 105mm (set to f11) macro and twin flash. I kept the light quite dim, such that only this shot had fully acceptable focus. I left one claw out of the frame but not bad for an unplanned shot. :thumb
Harold
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Thanks. The flash was metered TTL. The level of brightness as what I chose PP, something I found a little difficult to decide with this subject.
After several attempts to master the settings, this was my first e-mail notification! (Replying via the link logged me out).
Harold
I just remembered, this image, of the same individual, was further adjusted, to give my preferred level of brightness/saturation:
Brioan v.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/lordv/
http://www.lordv.smugmug.com/
I'm very surprised. In the early summer, on warm evenings, look for flying aggregations over the top of a lone tree or chimney stack (not good for maco! ). We used to get them over a conifer in the back garden of our terraced house. Also, a lone flyer at low level, rather like the flight of a bumble bee, can often be these but they are very occasional. (More often they are the green Rose Chafer).
Harold
Davy
Thanks, Davy. You never know when a subject will present itself, especially when it will literally do so.
Harold
Don't get them at home but see them elsewhere.
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Goldenorfe’s Flickr Gallery
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Phils Photographic Adventures Blog
Yes, Phil, like large (European, anyway) beetles in general, they are not streamlined flyers. Stag Beetles are in a class of their own for lumbering flight.
Harold