Extreme Macro Insects
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Extreme Macro Insects
Not realy microscope pictures but at my introduction on this forum some of you asked for some of these.
Extreme Macro's, made with the set-up as on the picture.
Canon EOS 50D, Canon MP-E65 Macro lens, Cognisys StackShot, 4-way Macro rail, IKEA Jansjö LED spots.
Extreme Macro's, made with the set-up as on the picture.
Canon EOS 50D, Canon MP-E65 Macro lens, Cognisys StackShot, 4-way Macro rail, IKEA Jansjö LED spots.
Re: Extreme Macro Insects
Thank you: very nice setup and excellent images.
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- Posts: 15
- Joined: Mon Oct 13, 2014 7:17 am
- Location: The Netherlands
- Contact:
Re: Extreme Macro Insects
Thanks
Re: Extreme Macro Insects
Top shots !
Re: Extreme Macro Insects
Bonjour
Superbe photos
Merci pour le partage
Cordialement seb
Superbe photos
Merci pour le partage
Cordialement seb
Microscope Leitz Laborlux k
Boitier EOS 1200D + EOS 1100D
Boitier EOS 1200D + EOS 1100D
- rocks in head
- Posts: 1
- Joined: Wed Oct 29, 2014 9:39 am
- Location: Johannesburg, South Africa
Re: Extreme Macro Insects
I want to do something similar to this but with micro minerals, Carl Hennig's artical July 2014 went a long way to puting me on the right path, only need to figure out how to capture more light
Re: Extreme Macro Insects
Can you elaborate a bit on what you intend to do, please? Subject to being corrected, I think Hennig used transmitted light and thin rock sections (which pass light). These "extreme macro" insect images are taken with incident light (flash?) and, it appears a microscope objective fitted to a DSLR camera (Jan l'Amie kindly correct me).rocks in head wrote:I want to do something similar to this but with micro minerals, Carl Hennig's artical July 2014 went a long way to puting me on the right path, only need to figure out how to capture more light