This is a focus-stacked image of one of my preserved paper wasps. Their face reminds me of the devil and each time that I get tagged by one, I'm sure that they flew up through the cracked earth from the bowels of hell.
The session was an experiment of pushing the limits of a 50mm enlarger lens beyond the 4X-magnification that I can get on extended bellows alone.
I measured the magnification at 6.3X from the reversed mounted 50mm enlarger lens mounted on a section of extension tube connected to a Raynox DCR-150 used as a tube lens extended 208mm from the camera sensor. I've attached an image of the tabletop macro rig showing the working distance of the subject. The diffusion for the illumination is removed to reveal the wasp staged before the camera.
Longshadow, thanks for dropping by.
Wasp are even uglier close up...lol
Awesome Sippy. One of my favorites. I always look at your post seldom comment. Great job as usual.
Another excellent shot with the bonus showing the staging of the shot.
CindyHouk wrote:
Wasp are even uglier close up...lol
Cindy, I can walk among them on my walkabouts in the fields and they pay no attention to me. I get tagged by them around the house several times each summer. The most painful was getting tagged on the top of my head.
Drbobcameraguy wrote:
Awesome Sippy. One of my favorites. I always look at your post seldom comment. Great job as usual.
Thanks, Drbobcameraguy. I appreciate the feedback.
Thanks, Flyguy. Glad that you could drop by.
UTMike wrote:
Another excellent shot with the bonus showing the staging of the shot.
Thanks, UTMike. I thought that I would include an image of the rig for those who were curious about how I arranged the components for the session.
Excellent work!! Way beyond my skill set that's for sure!!
FrumCA wrote:
Excellent work!! Way beyond my skill set that's for sure!!
Thanks, FrumCA. It's a lot easier with a deceased specimen than it is with a live one moving around.
sippyjug104 wrote:
This is a focus-stacked image of one of my preserved paper wasps. Their face reminds me of the devil and each time that I get tagged by one, I'm sure that they flew up through the cracked earth from the bowels of hell.
The session was an experiment of pushing the limits of a 50mm enlarger lens beyond the 4X-magnification that I can get on extended bellows alone.
I measured the magnification at 6.3X from the reversed mounted 50mm enlarger lens mounted on a section of extension tube connected to a Raynox DCR-150 used as a tube lens extended 208mm from the camera sensor. I've attached an image of the tabletop macro rig showing the working distance of the subject. The diffusion for the illumination is removed to reveal the wasp staged before the camera.
This is a focus-stacked image of one of my preserv... (
show quote)
Wow Sippy, this is a real treat to see the equipment you use to get these incredible images.
sippyjug104 wrote:
This is a focus-stacked image of one of my preserved paper wasps. Their face reminds me of the devil and each time that I get tagged by one, I'm sure that they flew up through the cracked earth from the bowels of hell.
The session was an experiment of pushing the limits of a 50mm enlarger lens beyond the 4X-magnification that I can get on extended bellows alone.
I measured the magnification at 6.3X from the reversed mounted 50mm enlarger lens mounted on a section of extension tube connected to a Raynox DCR-150 used as a tube lens extended 208mm from the camera sensor. I've attached an image of the tabletop macro rig showing the working distance of the subject. The diffusion for the illumination is removed to reveal the wasp staged before the camera.
This is a focus-stacked image of one of my preserv... (
show quote)
Whoa! Amazing work, here.
That's a serious macro setup, too.
George
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