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To commemorate my first deviation with 100 favorites (now 341! [link] ), I thought I'd upload another one, taken 7 minutes later.
This one isn't quite as big, but somehow I kind of like it better; I just really like the pattern. The title is incredibly cheesy in my opinion, but it's also kind of like the Muse album, which is really good. Taken with my old Vivitar MF 100mm f2.8 1:1 macro, with a +5 diopter lens (approximately +5 - my brother sort of made it). All the rest of the technical info is in the EXIF data. The background is a mohair scarf. Lighting is natural (cloudy day), and I of course used a tripod. I did some minor editing; a bit of levels, and increased the exposure a bit (no cropping). To get good snow flake pictures, it has to be right around -5ºC - too cold, and they'll look nice, but they'll be tiny, too warm and they'll be nice and big, but they'll just be puff balls, and they may even melt very quickly. Given how little is in focus, even at f9.5, anything other than a flat flake doesn't really work. I've also concluded that tight weave, and even glass doesn't work as a good background. Because when you're that close up, you just see all the imperfections, and it doesn't look nice. I think the ideal is hairy things, which are meant to be chaotic and "imperfect", and the flakes rest on the hairs nicely as well. --- WOW!! My first DD This picture is getting so much attention lately! First it gets in my credit union's (bank) calendar, and they use it for their internal Christmas cards, then I make cards of it, then I enter it in a contest on here, and that gets it a bunch of attention that turns into this DD! --- Since people seemed interested, I've now written a much more detailed guide on taking snow flake pictures; [link] Daily DeviationGiven 2008-12-04Water of Symmetry by ~crimsonpenguin tells a story of how to take macro photos in extreme cold weather conditions (please read crimsonpenguin's deviation comment). Also, as December is one of the 'winter' seasons in the Northern Hemisphere why not celebrate the cool weather with a detailed snowflake. (Suggested by ~Haen9 and Featured by ^dandelgrosso) |
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November 6, 2008
133 KB 133 KB 820×543 StatisticsCamera Data
PENTAX Corporation
PENTAX *ist DS 1 second F/9.5 0 mm 200 Jan 14, 2008, 3:27:33 PM Share
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"If your pictures aren't good enough, you aren't close enough."
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I have been trying for a shot like this for ages !
I think it was too warm here for the last snow fall - maybe I should try later in evening ?
I like idea of what to photo these on - have been trying thru glass but its been as waste of time.
If you have any more hints/tips I would love to hear them....I am using an slr (fixed lense) with a raynox macro adapter......is it good enough?
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There are 10 kinds of people in this world, those who know binary, and those who don't.
The only thing with evening, is it's rather dark. At this time of here, in Ontario, it's just too dark after 4 or so. I does depend how much wind and snow there is though (I got away with 1-2 seconds), and of course, if you can come up with artificial light that doesn't melt the flakes, then that's not a problem (I tried a little LED solar light, which ALMOST worked, but not quite).
Yeah, after this I thought glass was the way to go, with some nice colorful thing behind... but unless you have very perfect glass, it doesn't really work. But I'm glad I tried it anyway.
I'm not sure exactly what a Raynox macro adaptor is (and I'm assuming you mean a fixed focal length lens), but the ideal would be a real 1:1 macro lens, with a closeup lens/diopter on it. OR, I found that reversing a 28mm lens ( [link] ), but in my case it would be MUCH less convenient (and snow flake pictures are already very un-convenient).
Good luck!
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There are 10 kinds of people in this world, those who know binary, and those who don't.
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