Yay, macro, I've got 1000s of 'em
Mantispa laying eggs
Canon 1D Mk2n, EF 100macro, off camera flash
Yay, macro, I've got 1000s of 'em
Mantispa laying eggs
Canon 1D Mk2n, EF 100macro, off camera flash
Rob Gray — Nature Photographer Extraordinaire
www.robgray.com
Long Dead by TIN CAN COLLEGE, on Flickr
Tin Can
Excuse me, but I do not look in the sections of the forum, but have everything displayed in the "unified view".
So, I'll give you the following task, because that's what brought me to the large format: take pictures with your analog 35mm SLR and bellows, extensions, macro lenses. And on color slide film. But please measure the exposure with an incident light meter like the Sekonic L398. Or with an external spot meter. Zackzack, nix TTL ...
Here are a few smaller paper negatives, only in 9x12. Multigrade RC, about ISO 3. Paper negatives give you an immediate idea of whether you are right or wrong. This is really a big advantage of large format photography.
Last edited by Daniel Casper Lohenstein; 5-Mar-2021 at 08:53.
fotografie.ist ...
Hey Daniel, clicking “Unified view” shows each thread’s forum location (look to the right), same as clicking on “New posts,” as addressed and remedied in my previous post. Like your shots! ;^)
Nice!
“Alright, Mr. Demille, I’m ready for my close-up.”
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Here’s a butterfly I’ve managed to capture all the way to 1:1. Had to get very close for this life-size magnification. Kept the sun in his eyes so he couldn’t see me. Check out that long tongue, whoops, I mean proboscis:
Nikon N90s
Tamron 180mm/3.5 macro lens
Nikon SB-22s (TTL flash on bracket with SC-17 cord)
1/250 sec. @ f/32 manual exposure
Fuji Velvia-50
Nikon Coolscan V ED/Nikon Scan
fotografie.ist ...
Everything we see here on LFPF is digital
I shot my Dead Bug very quickly this morning on iPad 5 mit zoom on tripod with 10 shot automatic stacking
all editing done in camera, the black border added in PS
Nobody has done a 'real' print exchange since my last 2, years ago
I shoot up to 11X14 with TMax 400, Tri X 320 and Extascan, all too big for my scanner
some IS macro
Tin Can
Please PM me with your questions and I promise I’ll get back – meantime I’m busy posting, plus hope to see more of your nice shots…
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This is wood from a White Bark Pine high in the mountains, fallen after an attack of the mountain pine beetle. This is a full-frame scan, so you can imagine how little this flame-like patch of wood actually is.
Nikon N90s on tripod
Tamron 180mm/3.5 macro lens
Fuji Velvia-50
Nikon Coolscan V ED/Nikon Scan
Very rare
Cosmo loved their fragrance as did I, so I brought them home often
Never saw this color https://seedrack.com/indiv/strelitzi...QaAsHgEALw_wcB
I forgot that flower...
Thanks for a memory
Tin Can
fotografie.ist ...
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