stephbg: I made this! (Default)
stephbg ([personal profile] stephbg) wrote2012-02-08 05:33 pm
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Wildlife: Wasps on a pond

The problem with living things is they have this terribly inconvenient tendency to move about. I saw these wasps coming to drink at my pond, so I thought I would try and catch a shot while they were briefly still. A tricky proposition because the camera's macro mode is not kind to moving subjects, but there was plenty of light so I gave it a go.



These first few are just static poses as I was intending:

wasp1

It's a shame they were all attracted to the rather grungy dead leaf.

wasp4


Bonus two-shot:

wasp2


But this one's my favourite, even though I thought at the time it was a writeoff:

wasp3


Ain't serendipity grand?
ext_54464: Michael as a Lego minifig (minifig-crop)

[identity profile] leahcim.livejournal.com 2012-02-08 01:52 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes, you seem to be interpreting me correctly. :)

With SLR zoom lenses, the minimum focus distance tends to not change with the zoom position, resulting in the maximum magnification (ie. how big the bugs appear on screen) occurring at the telephoto end of the zoom. With compact cameras, minimum focus distance actually increases quite drastically with zoom, which is why your camera probably disables the zoom in macro mode, and (at least with the compacts I've owned) maximum magnification therefore happens at the wide end of the zoom.

[identity profile] stephbg.livejournal.com 2012-02-08 04:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Zoom isn't disabled in macro mode, but you do have to back away from the subject if you're in close so there's not much point. I do use it if I can't/won't get *very* close to my subjects (giant chunky spiders for one), but I don't take many pictures like that.