Thanks for your nice comments...I did get lucky in that the
dragonfly landed on rocks that, in combination with the late day
sun, made some nice shapes. Sometimes it's better to be lucky than
good, as they say.
You're probably right that an SLR offers the opportunity to be more
consistent and more refined in getting good macro shots. I guess
my response was out of habits I had formed with my previous
digicams (the Canon G1 and Kodak DC290), which were small, light
and easy (even with add-on close-up lenses) to set up on a small
tripod and get close to a subject...plus in the case of the G1,
using the swiveling LCD was great for low ground shots.
With the Fuji, I just have to be a little more methodical, and if
your lens is heavy (like the 70-180mm is), the tripod collar has to
be sturdy enough or else the whole thing comes crashing down.
But you can't beat good SLR glass...I'm looking forward to seeing
more of your macros as you refine your setup. I've heard nothing
but terrific things about that Sigma macro lens you're considering.
Regards,
Robert
Brian
Those are excellent pictures, especially given the equipment you
used (not bad at all, but usually the more close-up lenses and
extenders you use, the more the quality degrades).
I still haven't done a lot of macro shooting (a little more
cumbersome with an SLR than with one of the small prosumer digicams
with macro modes), and getting little critters to stay still and
learning not to scare them is something I'm getting the hang of.
Here's my first dragonfly shot ever...not as good as yours, because
I just had to react with my 70-180mm Nikkor (no extenders, close-up
lenses or tripod) as quickly as I could when this guy decided to
land on a rock near me...this was as close as I was able to get
before it flew off.
Nice job!
Robert
Here's some Fuji S1 macro shots I took yesterday at a reservoir
near my house. You won't believe the lens setup I used!
Nikon 35-70 f3.5 (not "D" type)
Tamron 2X teleconverter ("pro" model)
An old Sigma 2X close-up asphyrical lens
http://www.doxphotos.com/tiny_things.htm
Dox
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See my site:
http://www.doxphotos.com