View Full Version : More Natural light macros
LordV
29th of June 2006 (Thu), 15:15
Beginning to enjoy shooting with just the 105mm EX on the 300d and no flash- rig is a lot lighter :)
Brian V.
Narcissus fly (hoverfly) doing a bumble bee impression
http://static.flickr.com/67/176994675_5a960a3d0d_o.jpg
Bee on miniature Hebe blooms
http://static.flickr.com/60/176998123_f467d90750_o.jpg
Damselfly
http://static.flickr.com/29/176998128_6053749bf9_o.jpg
Spider dream
http://static.flickr.com/51/177004512_cc95048bef_o.jpg
Soldier fly Chloromyia formosa male
http://static.flickr.com/78/177004518_a8c7f76bfb_o.jpg
chemicalbro
29th of June 2006 (Thu), 15:22
the damsel and spider are superb shots
there's something about natural light that just adds a lot to a photo
dpastern
29th of June 2006 (Thu), 16:59
Lovely shots Brian, I prefer the look of natural light myself, it just looks...right. But I find it's much harder to do.
Dave
ATBphotography
29th of June 2006 (Thu), 17:34
Great shots Brian 1+2 and the spider are excellent. I agree natural light looks loads better most of the time, but its so difficult getting the available light in England with the Mp-e, but fingers crossed the weathers warming up. :D lets hope it stays this way.
pxl8
29th of June 2006 (Thu), 17:50
Finally... you've seen the light... you see what I did there?
I'll get me coat :)
I'd stick with the 20D Brian, you get at least a stop more on the ISO before the grain kicks in. I found ISO800 was better than 400 was on the 300D. The light on the Damselfly is just gorgeous, can't beat the real thing ;)
dazzlebea
29th of June 2006 (Thu), 18:28
Natural light? Never thought of that :oops:, we have plenty of light here in SoCal. But trying that will have to wait, I'm leaving for Japan tomorrow where it is miserable with thunderstorms and such. Talk about bad timing :(
I really enjoy these shots, Brian! I just love the bokeh in the spider shot :)
LordV
30th of June 2006 (Fri), 06:48
the damsel and spider are superb shots
there's something about natural light that just adds a lot to a photo
Thanks Alan,
You are right about natural light but it does seem to require slightly ovecast conditions or early am/late pm to get the right sort of light.
I find normally bright sunlight shots actually look worse than flash ones.
Brian V.
LordV
30th of June 2006 (Fri), 06:49
Lovely shots Brian, I prefer the look of natural light myself, it just looks...right. But I find it's much harder to do.
Dave
Thanks Dave,
Nice to do them when conditions allow but fairly impractical for high mag work :)
Brian V.
LordV
30th of June 2006 (Fri), 06:51
Great shots Brian 1+2 and the spider are excellent. I agree natural light looks loads better most of the time, but its so difficult getting the available light in England with the Mp-e, but fingers crossed the weathers warming up. :D lets hope it stays this way.
Thanks Andrew :)
I think it's fairly impractical to do with the MPE-65- works well if the light is right for shots less than 1:1.
Brian V.
LordV
30th of June 2006 (Fri), 06:54
Finally... you've seen the light... you see what I did there?
I'll get me coat :)
I'd stick with the 20D Brian, you get at least a stop more on the ISO before the grain kicks in. I found ISO800 was better than 400 was on the 300D. The light on the Damselfly is just gorgeous, can't beat the real thing ;)
Thanks pxl8
Agree when the light is good it can't be beat but as I said above there's too many times when natural light is impractical for me to swap over completely.
Think I'm going to have to start thinking about reflectors or partial screens though as I find shooting in strong sunlight gives worse results than flash.
Brian V.
LordV
30th of June 2006 (Fri), 06:56
Natural light? Never thought of that :oops:, we have plenty of light here in SoCal. But trying that will have to wait, I'm leaving for Japan tomorrow where it is miserable with thunderstorms and such. Talk about bad timing :(
I really enjoy these shots, Brian! I just love the bokeh in the spider shot :)
Thanks Bea,
think all the best natural light shots I've done have been with slight cloud cover- strong direct overhead sun is worse than diffused flash unless you can moderate it somehow.
It's just a different style. I'm often shooting now with both cameras setup- 300D with 105mm ex macro natural light and the 20D with the MPE-65 and flash
Brian V.
martin-images
30th of June 2006 (Fri), 07:42
Brian what was the exp for theses shots and iso ??? the dof is realy good, even at f16 its so shallow with flash, you must have had very slow shutters speeds as the lens must be stopped down so much to get that dof, must have been a very still day with no movment at all
Martin
LordV
30th of June 2006 (Fri), 07:52
Brian what was the exp for theses shots and iso ??? the dof is realy good, even at f16 its so shallow with flash, you must have had very slow shutters speeds as the lens must be stopped down so much to get that dof, must have been a very still day with no movment at all
Martin
Fraid it varies a bit
eg spider ISO200 F10 1/200th, damselfly F6.3 ISO400 1/160th. The soldierfly was focus stacked from 2 shots.
Brian V.
Leorooster
30th of June 2006 (Fri), 08:31
Great series, especially #1 & #2.
LordV
30th of June 2006 (Fri), 14:44
Great series, especially #1 & #2.
Thanks Leorooster,
Those miniature Hebes make a great background plus the bugs like them, can play hell with exposure though.
Brian V.
Fittipaldi
30th of June 2006 (Fri), 15:16
These are great shots, the colours of the damsel and soldier flies are exquisite :)
Are these all from your garden?
LordV
30th of June 2006 (Fri), 16:45
These are great shots, the colours of the damsel and soldier flies are exquisite :)
Are these all from your garden?
Thanks
Yes they are all from my garden :)
Brian V.
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