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Old 25-11-2007, 05:13 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Nigel Cliffe Nigel Cliffe is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Aug 2006
Posts: 10
Default photographing flowers

Stuart Noble wrote:
Janet Tweedy wrote:
In article , Stuart Noble
writes
K wrote:

Main enemy of focus on supermacro is low light levels - if the
subject is lit badly, the pic is out of focus.

Absolutely. If you're 2" away, the camera itself is usually blocking
the light.
I find macro photography endlessly frustrating, and much better
close-ups of anything you care to mention can be seen on various web
sites.



I take your point but sometimes you see a pant or flower that you
want to identify or remind yourself of it's height and spread if you
are buying one. Then you need to get as good a picture as you can.

Janet


Agreed. I take endless pics at the garden centre, often of labels and
things I can't be bothered to write down, but macro photography is
something else. A closeup of a bee's kneecap is not my style.



See my earlier post in the thread about "practical cheap macro" method.

Most cameras suffer from the problems you mentioned earlier - need to do
Macro about 2in (or less) from the subject which casts a huge shadow, and
distorts the picture.

This method works best if
(a) the camera has a long zoom range, the longer the better (x6=good,
x10=amazing, etc), and
(b) it helps if the camera has a screw-filter mount (or manufacturer offers
one as an optional extra).


Buy a cheap x2 and x4 closeup lens. They are £4 each at 7dayshop.com, other
places may have them as well. Fit to camera, and zoom to the long end.
Camera will now focus for a macro shot, yet you stand 1 or 2 feet from the
subject.

One can bodge the same with the closeup lens held in the hand, but you
really need a tripod (or friend) to hold half the bits !



- Nigel


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Nigel Cliffe,
Webmaster at http://www.2mm.org.uk/