mareo1912 Posted May 25, 2018 Report Posted May 25, 2018 Hey fellow members, got my new macro lens today and wanted to share some of the shots. Yet a lot to optimize but I was stunned by the detail that comes up. Sizes for comparizon: Dragons nose is 1.2mm on full length The center triangle on the shibuichi Tsuba is 1.9mm, the crack invisible with bare eyes. The blade picture is from a suguha hamon, you see the tempered area, about 7mm wide The peonys center bulb is 3.3mm in diameter (btw a stunning piece!) Any folks here that know more about photography and want to share some advice to get better pics? Best regards, Marco 4 Quote
TETSUGENDO Posted May 25, 2018 Report Posted May 25, 2018 Spectacular detail, well done Marco! Cheers, Quote
Vermithrax16 Posted May 25, 2018 Report Posted May 25, 2018 WOW! Excellent work,thanks for posting. Quote
CSM101 Posted May 25, 2018 Report Posted May 25, 2018 Hi Marco, when it comes to Macro you have to learn how to stack a photo. Your depth of field is very small. 2-4 mm at it´s best. Uwe G. Quote
Ken-Hawaii Posted May 25, 2018 Report Posted May 25, 2018 The macro lens is only as good as the lighting, Marco, & if you plan to shoot a lot of images as close as you did here, I'd suggest investing in a ring light. The stacking technique Uwe mentions is covered here: https://petapixel.com/2014/09/07/tutorial-easily-focus-stack-using-photoshop-feature-probably-didnt-know/ Quote
Vermithrax16 Posted May 25, 2018 Report Posted May 25, 2018 Love Marco's shots as is and I had zero idea what Uwe and Ken were talking about......... then I watched the video and really looked at Uwe's comparative pictures above. WOW!!!!! Really blown away at the visual capture there. Great ideas guys. Quote
Bazza Posted May 25, 2018 Report Posted May 25, 2018 Marco said: Dragons nose is 1.2mm on full length Wonderful detail indeed. Worse case of inverse acne I've ever seen!! If the nose were red instead of gold I'm sure we would be looking at the local reprobate!!! BaZZa. PS - having a 60mm macro lens I'm reading up on stacked images... Quote
mareo1912 Posted May 26, 2018 Author Report Posted May 26, 2018 Thanks for the kind words and also for the advice! with all honesty I'm really low budget with the photographs, so I don't expect to get the stars from the sky With the stacking I had already made the photos for that, but was too busy yesterday, so tried it this morning (Attached). I find the light problematic, will need a more homogenous source, only problem is that I'm really max.1cm away from the object and that's hard to lighten up. Marco 1 Quote
Surfson Posted May 26, 2018 Report Posted May 26, 2018 It's amazing what these artists did with their bare hands. I have always wondered - did kinko artists have magnifying glasses/lenses of any kind to use while they work? Quote
Surfson Posted May 26, 2018 Report Posted May 26, 2018 I have never seen a Japanese Edo period magnifying glass. Have you Steven? Do you have any photos? Quote
TETSUGENDO Posted May 26, 2018 Report Posted May 26, 2018 Yes, the older examples are lapidary work in rock crystal, later ones are glass. No, try a web search. Quote
kissakai Posted May 26, 2018 Report Posted May 26, 2018 I've tried with my macro lens but nowhere as good as your I'll have to get it out and try again Quote
Ken-Hawaii Posted May 27, 2018 Report Posted May 27, 2018 Much better depth-of-field, Marco, good work! A ring-light goes around your lens, & they're pretty inexpensive. I use one like this: https://www.amazon.com/SAMTIAN-Macro-Display-Adapter-Diffusers/dp/B01HPGI5B2/& it costs all of $29. One hint for macro images is to keep a bottle of compressed-air with you, & blow off all the crud that you won't know is there until you blow up your photo. Quote
dirtvictim Posted May 30, 2018 Report Posted May 30, 2018 Are you related to biggie smalls? LOL nice pics. Quote
mareo1912 Posted May 30, 2018 Author Report Posted May 30, 2018 Thanks guys! Thanks for the link Ken, will have a take on that item! Quote
kissakai Posted June 8, 2018 Report Posted June 8, 2018 I'd like to thank Ken for suggesting the use of a light ring. I bought one from Amazon and I thought is was quite cheap So back out with the Macro lens and try again The results are below. At the moment I'm still playing and will use my tripod next time The first image is the whole tsuba so you can see where the enlarged areas are located Any pointer to better imaging would help especially the depth of field. I tried the 'ring' with high and low light and also you can turn off the left or right hand lights to give a more 3D effect An off shoot from using this ring light is for my normal tsuba images. Normally I have two spot lights under a light tent but it is fiddly to get an even light With the 'ring' is much more of an even light and less fiddly. A real bonus for my new images. One note is that with the clear filter the colour is all wrong so you need to use the off white filter which gives a good true colour. With my previous setting these were darker patches Grev Quote
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