Posts Tagged ‘macro’

Apertures and Macro Photography – Tech Thursday

©TimeLine Media - macro photography of flowers

If you are looking to make extreme close-up photos of a subject, macro lenses allow you to make photos of a subject in a very different way than other lenses. What makes macro lenses different from other lenses, is that it is possible to shoot very close to your subject. The minimum focus distance on these lenses are much lower meaning you can get closer. Subsequently you fill the frame with a detail of your subject and still focus clearly. Most regular lenses require more distance from your subject. Only then will the lens be able to focus on a subject clearly.

Macro Photography

On point and shoot cameras, this is usually represented by a flower symbol, so I’ll use them here. The lens that I used for these is the Nikon 105mm f/2.8 Micro-Nikkor which produces tack sharp images of really tiny subjects. The details can be so large in the frame using this lens! At the minimum focus distance of this lens, the subject can be rendered 1:1. This means that when the lens is set to 1:1, the size of the detail you are photographing will be exposed on the sensor at EXACTLY the same size – making things like pollen on a flower easily visible.

©TimeLine Media - macro photography of flowers
©TimeLine Media – macro photography of flowers
©TimeLine Media - macro photography of flowers
©TimeLine Media – macro photography of flowers

In these next two photos, I changed my settings a bit from the first two. This relates to the aperture or depth of field in the photos. The first two were exposed at an aperture of f/4  which is very wide open for this lens at this close to the subject. In order to get much more in focus with macro subjects, a smaller aperture is needed to make the entire flower and its details in focus. For these next two, the aperture was set at f/32! Additional flash was needed, but the entire flower is in focus – perfect for documenting them for textbooks or other collections.

©TimeLine Media - macro photography of flowers
©TimeLine Media – macro photography of flowers
©TimeLine Media - macro photography of flowers
©TimeLine Media – macro photography of flowers

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703-864-8208

Sunday Break

Red-Dahlia-www.timelinedc.com

Has Spring finally arrived? We were out pulling weeds and getting the garden ready yesterday, so it sure feels very close! It has been a busy week, and today feels like a good day for a break from the usual Sunday. Happy Easter to all that celebrate, and thanks for stopping by the blog! I think I’ll try and make more photos today. Stay tuned to see if I come with anything good.

Red Dahlia from my uncle's garden ©TimeLine Media
Red Dahlia from my uncle’s garden ©TimeLine Media

For this post, I went back to find some recent spring blooms that I have come across. Although it is not usually recommended to crank color sliders in your post processing programs, I could not help it for these. Are they over cooked to you? Overall, red pops in digital images, so it is easy to go overboard with it. However, I could not help it with the dahlia image. Perhaps the bright yellow center is a nice contrast to the surrounding color.

For the daffodils in the flower arrangement, it was not as much the yellow that I boosted, but the blues and greens. This is usually avoided in photos with people as it destroys skin tones. However, I like how all the colors mix together in this frame. Don’t be afraid to push the color!

Flower arrangement given as an Easter Sunday gift ©TimeLine Media
Flower arrangement given as an Easter Sunday gift ©TimeLine Media

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703-864-8208

Winter Coming!

It was a pleasant summer in Northern VA this year. However, the change of seasons reminds us that winter is coming. For my uncle, he has had another amazing year for flowers! He takes a lot of time and effort to plant, feed, water, and maintain many roses, lillies, pansies, and other flowers in front of my mother’s house.

They always give me great opportunities to work out my macro lenses! These are film scans of Fujifilm Velvia 50 that I had left over from school (the sloppy border is added for fun). It’s amazing the amount of color and saturation this film provides.

Looking through slides is very old-school these days, but my eyes have a vastly different reaction when looking through transparent chromes. I don’t know if it really is a more analog/organic process, or if my eyes are just “used” to looking at pictures through a computer monitor. However, I really enjoy viewing pictures this way!

Unfortunately, it is just getting harder and harder to find good labs that will process E-6 films locally. Not to mention the up-front costs of film, the time to develop, the time to scan into the computer, etc. But I do have a collection of slides that I’m proud of. Additionally, I have some black-and-white negatives that I processed myself. I’ll see if any others are worth posting!

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703-864-8208

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