This is an image of my preserved green June bug that I set on a piece of broken tree limb for a single macro shot as a test of the flash diffuser that I made from a large cottage cheese container that I posted a few days ago which has now been painted black so it does not look "cheesy".
The container is lined with aluminum foil and a piece of China White polyester fabric is used to diffuse the flash.
This macro image was taken with a Nikon Z6 and the Nikon S mount 105mm macro lens. Camera settings were manual mode, f/11 aperture, 1/160 sec., ISO-200, and auto white balance. The flash is a Nikon SB-800 set on manual mode and 1/8 duration power.
sippyjug104 wrote:
This is an image of my preserved green June bug that I set on a piece of broken tree limb for a single macro shot as a test of the flash diffuser that I made from a large cottage cheese container that I posted a few days ago which has now been painted black so it does not look "cheesy".
The container is lined with aluminum foil and a piece of China White polyester fabric is used to diffuse the flash.
This macro image was taken with a Nikon Z6 and the Nikon S mount 105mm macro lens. Camera settings were manual mode, f/11 aperture, 1/160 sec., ISO-200, and auto white balance. The flash is a Nikon SB-800 set on manual mode and 1/8 duration power.
This is an image of my preserved green June bug th... (
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Interesting set up. But how do you preserve a "bug" and keep it fresh looking? I find dead June Bugs and Green Scarab Beetles but they look grungy and as they age get moldy as well.
lamiaceae wrote:
Interesting set up. But how do you preserve a "bug" and keep it fresh looking? I find dead June Bugs and Green Scarab Beetles but they look grungy and as they age get moldy as well.
Mike, I collect them and I dispatch them in a jar with cotton balls saturated with Klean Strip MEK Substitute. I blow them off with a puffer and brush them with a natural hair artist brush. Beetle and other "durable" insects get a bath in the ultrasonic jewelry cleaner with distilled water and a few drops of dish soap. I store them in denatured alcohol and they last for many years.
Fuzzy insects and spiders get dispatched and stored in the freezer in a pill bottle with a mothball. Grubs, larvae, and caterpillars get a bath in scalding water to kill the bacteria in their gut to prevent them from turning black and they too get stored for long term in denatured alcohol.
Beautiful Sippy, I don't know which I like the better, the bug shot or the rig shots.
Curmudgeon wrote:
Beautiful Sippy, I don't know which I like the better, the bug shot or the rig shots.
Thanks, Curmudgeon. I'm playing around to pass the time and I have yet to settle on what method of diffusion I want to take out with me and the experimentation will continue.
kpmac wrote:
Beautiful, sippy.
Thanks, Kpmac. Where would the world be today if no one experimented..?
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