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Macro Photography Site Worth Seeing

close up insectMacro photography, especially refracting dew droplets, is something that has always facsinated me. The closer you get to an object the more you can identify with it, and some of God’s most amazing creations are so small we usually pass right over them.

I stumbled upon LordV Macros, a terrific website dedicated to macro photography today, and simply had to post a link here. Brian Valentine, a retired British microbiologist, has posted some stunning macro photography here.

For his refracting dew droplet shots, Dr. Valentine, or LordV, as he calls himself, uses a technique called stacking images. He takes several versions of the same composition, focusing on a different part of the composition each time, he then uses stacking images software to put the parts that are in sharp focus together. This allows a much greater depth of field than would otherwise be possible.

If you are at all interested in macro photography, stacking images or refracting dew droplets, do take a minute to visit his site. He explains how he achieves his macro photography masterpieces, and also tells what stacking images software and camera equipment he has chosen. You might want to take a peek simply to enjoy the terrific insect faces and refracting dew droplets he has composed!

Don’t know what refracting dew droplets are? Go to his site and see. You’ll be more than impressed! (And no, I didn’t take the photo of the fly, but I hope to achieve that much detail in the future!

Posted 1 year, 7 months ago at 9:41 pm.

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Are You Using Your Camera’s Full Potential?

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I’ve spent what seems like hundreds of hours pouring over my camera manual and was still having huge issues getting my macro to focus.

Just now I spent a happy half hour at www.dpreview.com and learned more about how to use my camera, and how to overcome it’s specific problems than I had in several hours reading the manual that came with it.

I have a Casio Exilim 7.2. The review I read was for an older model, but I now know which ISO is best for most pictures, what setting for the sharpness, saturation and contrast gives the most professional and tweak-able results, and how to take the clearest possible close-ups with this particular camera. What a relief!

I highly recommend bumping over there and checking to see if your camera has been reviewed. You’ll save yourself hundreds of hours of trial and error.

Posted 1 year, 10 months ago at 9:30 pm.

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