Catch me if you can!

Daniel

Site Contributor
Joined
Aug 15, 2007
Messages
664
Reaction score
28
Points
0
Location
Germany
Country
Germany
Display Name
Daniel
Lately I started feeding my A. mavortium larvae with bloodworms and newly hatched micro-earthworms and I was lucky enough to do some snapshots.

file_1237.jpg


file_1274.jpg


file_1275.jpg


file_1273.jpg
 
Those are some impressive pictures, Daniel! I always get a kick out of larvae eating - they can cram in so much food!
 
I always get a kick out of larvae eating - they can cram in so much food!

Yes, sometimes it is hard to believe your own eyes (or photographs). These larvae eat earthworms that are longer than themselves.
 
Holy cow! They are really stuffing their faces! All belly and mouth :p

Very nice pictures, Daniel!
 
Super pics Daniel, could you tell us more about how you shot these impressive photos?
 
These are great pics! In the first two, the larva looks like it has the longest tongue ever! And the third pic is beyond words!
 
Thanks for the nice comments everyone!

@Coen: I can give you some technical details, maybe that helps. I hope that I do not mix up the right specifications in english...

Technical equipment (it's not cheap but I am using it for business-activities as well...so maybe I am a lucky one):

- Canon EOS 400D DSLR
- Canon Speedlite 580 EXII
- lens: EFS 60 mm f/2.8 USM
- additional background-light from a desk lamp

Settings:

- manual Settings and manual focus, free hand (you are way faster this way)
- ISO 100, max. 200 to avoid any unnecessary noise
- relatively small aperture (meaning a high number) between 11 and 22 to have a good depth of field (I personally like it better this way) - this needs much light, especially on a short distance, therefore the flashgun
- a relatively high shutter speed of about 1/20 to 1/80 seconds since the larvae are moving fast

You see, there is not one setting but I played around a little bit. If you are interested, I can send you the settings for the single photographs; I think they are not displayed in the photosection since I shoot my photographs in RAW mode and later save them with photoshop.

I use to photograph my animals in a small glass-tank since that has less contortion than an acrylic one. Additionally I installed a dark background.

The rest is kneeling on the ground, bending your back, swaying back and forth - a lot of patience, endurance and quite some luck to hit the button at the right moment.

With this settings I can shoot things down to the size of daphnia ar artemia (the later with a higher ISO because I needed a high shutter speed in very short distance, you can see the noise):

file_1280.jpg


file_1281.jpg
 
That was a lot of useful info Daniel, thank you very much. I am currently trying to find addons like you already have for my Nikon D40. An external flash and a macro lens are on top of my wantlist!
 
Coen, I'm dying for a macro lens too. In its absence, I've found that a big magnifying glass works well (although is awkward). I was speaking to someone the other day about possibly mounting the magnifying glass to a screw-on filter, to ease the awkwardness of adjusting the lens while holding the magnifying glass.
 
The rest is kneeling on the ground, bending your back, swaying back and forth

That's the first sign of madness :D - either that or your lens doesn't focus fast enough in AF mode. I have the EFS 60 mm f/2.8 USM lens too and whilst the image quality is fantastic the USM focusing isn't as fast as it could be IMO. In the non-manual modes the field of depth is very shallow which make manual the only real option for animals that don't co-operate.

If I was to get another macro lens I'd probably go for EF rather than EFS. I wouldn't be surprised if Canon scrap EFS when budget DSLRS become full frame.

Those are great shots -worth all the back and neck ache!
 
That's the first sign of madness :D

You may be right - I am used to kneeling, bending my back and swaying back and forth since I am married! :D

The lens is indeed rather slow with focusing, especially at short distance (which should be the main use for a macro-lens...). That's why I focus manually - the swaying just gives me more flexibility for the last necessary millimeters.
 
General chit-chat
Help Users
  • No one is chatting at the moment.
    Chat Bot: Kepuchie has left the room. +1
    Back
    Top