There you go. Most of the magnification whilst still maintaining the lens functions such as aperture, etc.
Cheers, Steve
Printable View
There you go. Most of the magnification whilst still maintaining the lens functions such as aperture, etc.
Cheers, Steve
Hi,
If you want the best optical performance for macro work but don't want the expense of dedicated macro lenses, bellows are the next best thing. Some bellows are made that allow you to reverse the lens and this is a good feature.
This puts the object closest to what was the rear lens element, and the film (now ccd) at a further distance from what was the front element of the lens.
Bellows can also have the advantage of having an inbuilt rack for fine distance adjustment.
On my old setup, I had twin cables on the cable release so that I could focus at full aperture, preview the image stopped down and release the shutter with one press on the button.
Having said all the above, if you really want to do a lot of macro work, go for a macro lens. My favourite was a Nikon 105mm, 1:1 to inf. with a twist of the wrist.
cheers
Outside shots are harder. I managed not to get the web stuck to the lens, but the slight breeze meant it kept swaying and this was the sharpest I could get.
http://www.reddock.net/aulro/DSC06980-Edit.jpg
Cheers, Steve
PS the jpeg compression look really oversharpened....
For outdoor work i would only use a proper macro lense. How does the shrpness look in RAW without the compression?
Fuzzy is the short answer. It isn't quite in focus except for a couple of legs. However, I've been reading online about lab sharpening, which seems to have created a more realistic result, which is still quite sharp. There is also a lot of noise as this was at 800ISO. Knocking the noise back doesn't help with the shaprness...
http://www.reddock.net/aulro/DSC06980-Editlab.jpg
Cheers, Steve
Removing the noise in the BG will help a lot. Try to do a strong denoise in the BG and a weak on the insect.
Do a color range selection/white and tone down the whites. This will help to reduce the oversharpening look.