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Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Macro Technqiue shooting Bee fly on hand one handed

I try not to share just a macro shot or two, but a macro photography tip as well in my blog. And I am not going to make any exception here. This macro photography tip, however, will only work if you have a short or medium focal length macro lens, such as the Canon 100mm macro lens, Canon 60mm macro lens, or the Canon MP-E65 1X-5X Macro Lens.

But first a bit of story and drama first :D

A bee fly (Bombyliidae) on hand is better than ten in the bushes. 

I found this tiny bee fly (Bombyliidae), no more than 4mm i think, on a leaf but when i tried to photograph it, the bee fly took off and started hovering around me. I put my left hand near the bee fly and lo and behold - the bee fly (Bombyliidae) it perched on my hand. Perfect. Contrary to popular beliefs, it's actually easier to shoot one-handed for as long as part of the lens is rested against the left hand. It's a brilliant slr macro photography tip / technique I learned from one of my mentors LordV.This macro technique will need quite a bit of getting used to but keep at it and you'll benefit from this simple yet wonderful macro technique tremendously.

I snapped as many shots as i could with a pink leaf on the background.

All with 40D, MPE65 1X-5X macro lens, MT24EX twin flash with DIY Concave Diffuser. Full flash: 1/200, F11, ISO100, handheld

macro photography tip Bee fly on hand........IMG_2184 copy

macro photography tip Bee fly on hand........IMG_2190 copy

macro photography tip Bee fly on hand........IMG_2186 copy

macro photography tip Bee fly on hand........IMG_2192 copy

macro photography tip Bee fly on hand........IMG_2174 copy

macro photography tip Bee fly on hand........IMG_2195 copy

The moral of the story - keep trying. If you don't try, you'll never know. The same skittish insect you saw yesterday might be super cooperative today.

5 comments:

  1. Cool OM! where did you found the bee fly? haven't seem one around my place yet =(

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  2. Thanks JW. Not very common i must say. Seen it twice only so far. Once at a hill in Segambut and this time at Gasing. You'll need more than 1:1 to capture this :P

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  3. this capture using mp-e65 or ur canon 100mm macro?

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