in the first one, the motion of one of it legs,, really shows a fly's motion of rubbing their front two legs together, much better than if you had increased the shutter speed and frozen both leg's motion
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Brad Ross
There is a show called Monster Bug Wars on the Science channel. It shows various spiders, matids, centipedes etc trying to eat each other .
The video macro is incredible plus a lot of facts about the bugs too.
We have recently passed the shortest day here in the southern hemisphere, winter. Not much in the field or garden, especially after such a wet year and cold month. Still, something shows up on an almost daily basis.
Captured using the FZ50 and achromats - R150 on 250, onboard flash snooted and diffused, using AF with a little twist and TTL. An unusually sedate Doli fly.
So many great shots here! Seems Ill never be able to compete with all those exotic (to me) bugs you guys have around. But just for fun, I'll give it a go...
regards
C.
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E620, ZD 9-18, ZD14-42, ZD 14-45, ZD 14-54MKII, ZD50mm 2.0, ZD 40-150 mkI & II, ZD 70-300, Sigma 105mm 2.8 macro
EPL-1 14-42mm MKI and VF-2
and a bunch of OM lenses (see profile/plan)
The tiny creatures with black & orange shells are reminiscent of ladybugs, but these are much, much smaller--barely 1 mm across. They are a type of "true bug" --the Predatory Stink Bug (asopinae, first instars) and appear to be recently hatched from those remarkably decorated eggs. The entire cluster of eggs and insects is no more than 1 cm across.
From what I have read, these little first instars will develop into much larger, far less colorful adults. Considered beneficial.
I also enjoyed reading your blog. Your description (in that blog) of technique and apparatus will surely put to shame some of us (like me) who believe it requires a lot of specialized equipment to make such extraordinary macros. Well done!