Handheld looking down on the dragonfly. Using an Eos 5DsR, 100mm L, Raynox DCR250 & lit with a Lumiquest softbox.
Handheld looking down on the dragonfly. Using an Eos 5DsR, 100mm L, Raynox DCR250 & lit with a Lumiquest softbox.
Read less
Read less
Views
3148
Likes
Awards
Contest Finalist in Macro Monsters Photo Contest
Winner in Dragonfly Beauty (No Damselflies) Photo Challenge
Contest Finalist in Tiny Photo Contest
People's Choice in Macro Insects Photo Challenge
Winner in Microcosmos Photo Challenge
Peer Award
Absolute Masterpiece
Top Choice
Superb Composition
Magnificent Capture
All Star
Superior Skill
Genius
Outstanding Creativity
Virtuoso
Top Ranks
Categories
davidscottrobson
September 18, 2016
Hi Jessika - I used a Canon 100mm L with a Raynox DCR250 attached to the end of it to get a really close shot.
edstines
August 19, 2016
This is wonderful, curious about your lens. The details on fullsize is amazing eventhough iso=400.
davidscottrobson
September 18, 2016
Hi - I used a Canon 100mm with a Raynox 250 attached to the end. I also used a flash/softbox combo to reduce the noise although the Eos 5DsR handles pretty well at high ISO..
mihrt
March 15, 2017
CONGRATS ON YOUR AWARDS for this fabulous shot. Fantastic capture of the composite eye!!
jamesjohnston_3471
November 04, 2018
Wonderful crisp image. Thanks for entering my challenge. About as good as a macro gets, great tones, texture, colors and crop. Brilliant.
davidscottrobson
November 07, 2018
Thanks everyone for your lovely comments - sorry I didn't reply but I didn't get any notification from Viewbug :(
Same photographer See allBehind The Lens
Discover more photos See all
Behind The Lens
Location
I took it at Warren Heath (SSI) in Hampshire.Time
About 2pm.Lighting
I used a lumiquest softbox & flash at minimal setting to balance the light a little but otherwise it was naturally lit.Equipment
I used a Canon Eos 5DsR with a 100mm L Macro lens & a Raynox DCR250 attached to the lens to get more detail. It was taken handheld looking down onto the subject and was lit with a Canon external flash (580EX II) with a Lumiquest softbox to diffuse the light.Inspiration
I wanted to get a decent close up shot of a dragonfly's eye structure as it's not an easy shot to get.Editing
The image was cropped a tiny bit and sharpened slightly using a high pass filter. Other than some minor adjustments to contrast that was pretty much it.In my camera bag
Depends what I'm doing but for macro I normally carry a Canon Eos 5DsR, a Canon 100mm L, a Sigma Art 35mm, a Raynox DCR250 & Raynox 5320 Pro, a Canon flash, 4x Canon Batteries, 8x AAA batteries, a Lumiquest softbox, some spare diffuser material, a Velbon monopod (as they're really lightweight), occasionally a second camera body, and plenty of high-speed memory cards. I carry them in a Mindshift Gear backpack.Feedback
Just be patient - dragonflies in particular have specific behavioural patterns and so long as you don't spook them you can get pretty close - you just need to keep still and wait. Using the softbox/flash arrangement makes it easier to shoot hand-held - I find tripods very restrictive, especially in places like Warren Heath where you need to wander off the path to get the shot.