1 / 15

Macro Photography

Macro Photography. By: Dan Dexter. The World of Macro and What’s Inside. What is “Macro Photography” Equipment to achieve true macro Which lens should I use? Backyard (Jerry-Riggin it) macro methods Lighting the scene can get pretty mean!!! Short flash duration by wider aperture.

Jims
Télécharger la présentation

Macro Photography

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Macro Photography By: Dan Dexter

  2. The World of Macro and What’s Inside • What is “Macro Photography” • Equipment to achieve true macro • Which lens should I use? • Backyard (Jerry-Riggin it) macro methods • Lighting the scene can get pretty mean!!! • Short flash duration by wider aperture. • Supporting the shot, tripod and stance. • Recommended camera settings

  3. What is “Macro Photography” • Macro Photography is the process of taking a photography where the subject is the same size on the sensor as it is in real life. This is called 1:1 magnification. • Ex. Canon 50D sensor is 22.3mm x 14.9mm. • 22.3mm/22.3mm =1:1 magnification • 22.3mm/3.25mm =6.86:1 magnification

  4. Compact & SLR Cameras • Compact cameras allow the lens to focus at closer distances. • Close-up filters for compact cameras (usually don’t achieve 1:1) • Digital SLR Cameras have theability to attach separate lenseswith dedicated macro settings. • Extension tubes are also helpful. Thank you B&H!!!!

  5. Choosing The Right Gear • Working distance • Longer focal length = longer working distance. • Size of subject and end result size • Longer lenses may not magnify as much as shorter macro lenses • Canon 100mm macro has about a 2’ working distance for butterflies, 1’ working distance at 1:1 ratio.

  6. Lighting the scene • Flash • Exposure, ettl cord, Flash bracket, Diffusers • The closer the flash is to the subject, the “larger” it will appear, giving more diffused lighting. • Shoot aperture or shutter priority, or manual mode. Expose for background, let flash expose foreground. • Wider aperture = shorter flash duration.

  7. Reversing lenses • Reversing lenses onto the front of another • Ex. 100mm macro to 50mm = 2X life size (2:1) • Smaller front lens = less working distance but greater magnification. • Stop down front lens before mounting to retain smaller aperture. • Reversing couplers are available.

  8. Examples of Macro Rigs

  9. http://www.flickr.com/photos/johnhallmen

  10. Stance & Tripod Use • I will demonstrate…a little bit without looking too stupid… •  • Tripod =  unless you are very calm and patient…aka, not many of us.

  11. Recommended Camera Settings • Aperture priority or Shutter priority? • Up to 1:1, use between F5-F11, Shutter 1/200, ISO 100. Adjust ISO to give F5 or smaller aperture. • Tough background exposure? • Exposure (EC) and flash (FEC) compensation • Switch to Manual Mode if conditions are stable.

More Related