tinosa
Loc: Grand Rapids Michigan
Now that I have your attention... LOL
I took these a while back during my "macro period"
Panasonic Lumix FZ30 with a Nikon 6T diopter attached to a 12X Zoom.
Bmac
Loc: Long Island, NY
tinosa wrote:
Now that I have your attention... LOL
I took these a while back during my "macro period"
Panasonic Lumix FZ30 with a Nikon 6T diopter attached to a 12X Zoom.
You got my attention and I am glad you did. These are really fantastic pictures, thanks for sharing. 8-)
I especially like the one with the red pepper.
Looks like there's hope for us bridge camera guys.
Those photos are a real encouragement for what I have.
Thanks for posting them.
Many P&S and "bridge" camera make excellent close-up & macro cameras. Good lighting is the major obstacle when focusing quite close to lens objective.
Nikonian72 wrote:
Many P&S and "bridge" camera make excellent close-up & macro cameras. Good lighting is the major obstacle when focusing quite close to lens objective.
Thank you N72. I'm so obsessed with what I see posted, lighting was a distant issue to me, probably since it's rarely mentioned in the posted parameters or EXIF files.
I can see this is a very important priority here.
tinosa
Loc: Grand Rapids Michigan
One advantage of the smaller sensors in p&s and bridge cameras is the greater DOF. I have read that it can be as much as 1.6 times greater.
The trade off is noise at higher ISO and long exposures.
While a bridge camera will never equal the image quality of a DSLR, when used within it's limitations excellent results can be achieved. .
tinosa
Loc: Grand Rapids Michigan
A fond thank you to you kind folks for taking the time to comment.
tinosa wrote:
A fond thank you to you kind folks for taking the time to comment.
And thank you for posting. I liked all of them especially the X-rated second picture.
What sort of lighting were you using when you took those?
tinosa
Loc: Grand Rapids Michigan
rayford2 wrote:
tinosa wrote:
A fond thank you to you kind folks for taking the time to comment.
And thank you for posting. I liked all of them especially the X-rated second picture.
What sort of lighting were you using when you took those?
Sorry for the delayed response Rayford, this topic slipped through the cracks for me.
Any how, no special lighting just natural.
Glad you like it.
tinosa wrote:
rayford2 wrote:
tinosa wrote:
A fond thank you to you kind folks for taking the time to comment.
And thank you for posting. I liked all of them especially the X-rated second picture.
What sort of lighting were you using when you took those?
Sorry for the delayed response Rayford, this topic slipped through the cracks for me.
Any how, no special lighting just natural.
Glad you like it.
Thank you, Tinosa.
It's a great inspiration to me knowing I may be able to do the same without buying a lot of extra equipment.
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