Anything but insects and spiders |
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tpetpe ![]() Senior Member ![]() Joined: 30 December 2006 Location: Denmark Status: Offline Posts: 1472 |
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Those are very impressive shots wetapunga (thanks that is easier to say than chthoniid :)). Any idea what the magnification is on them? and what the subject size is? Very little flash glare there, but must have been a nightmare getting them framed.
Tim |
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Wētāpunga ![]() Senior Member ![]() Joined: 02 September 2007 Country: New Zealand Location: New Zealand Status: Offline Posts: 6829 |
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Thanks- the mite is about 2mm long, the opilionid 7-8mm. The setup was the a700, with the 90mm macro and the 6x Raynox adapter. Light was coming in from the Sigma EM-140 ringflash. I've found the 6x Raynox is the maximum I can go to for handheld shots.
Edited by wetapunga - 19 April 2011 at 10:20 |
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α1, α7cii- Voigtländer 15/4.5, 110/2.5 M; Zeiss Loxia- 21/2.8, 35/2, 50/2 & 85/2.4, Zeiss Batis- 85/1.8 & 135/2.8; Sony 24-105/4 & 100-400/4.5-5.6; Sigma 70/2.8 M; Sony 135/2.8 STF
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tpetpe ![]() Senior Member ![]() Joined: 30 December 2006 Location: Denmark Status: Offline Posts: 1472 |
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How you can do hand held at that magnification is a mystery :).
This was the biggest mite I have seen, about 3.5mm and frightened the mother in law today, some kind of velvet mite. ![]() Tim |
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Wētāpunga ![]() Senior Member ![]() Joined: 02 September 2007 Country: New Zealand Location: New Zealand Status: Offline Posts: 6829 |
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aah, we have those in NZ too. A cosmopolitan pest.
Back to the world of opilionids (and old shot) ![]() |
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α1, α7cii- Voigtländer 15/4.5, 110/2.5 M; Zeiss Loxia- 21/2.8, 35/2, 50/2 & 85/2.4, Zeiss Batis- 85/1.8 & 135/2.8; Sony 24-105/4 & 100-400/4.5-5.6; Sigma 70/2.8 M; Sony 135/2.8 STF
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evdelst ![]() Senior Member ![]() Joined: 11 November 2005 Country: Netherlands Location: Netherlands Status: Offline Posts: 290 |
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Ladybug
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MonkeyFoo ![]() Newbie ![]() Joined: 14 September 2010 Status: Offline Posts: 15 |
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A100 with reversed kit lens.
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Tue Romanow ![]() Senior Member ![]() Joined: 12 September 2006 Country: Denmark Location: Middelfart, Fyn Status: Offline Posts: 961 |
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Looks to me like a Trombidium holosericeum. A beautiful mite if you ask me. Most ppl. here in Denmark think they are grown up Anystis baccarum also called "Postmen" here. Danish postmen wear a red jacket almost the same colour...but they don't move anywhere near as fast!! ![]() |
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There's no such thing as too many lenses.
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bostonh ![]() Groupie ![]() Joined: 16 August 2010 Location: Mass, US Status: Offline Posts: 58 |
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Some great shots... this thread really gives me the creepy crawlies though!
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vinayn ![]() Senior Member ![]() Joined: 17 May 2009 Country: India Location: Bangalore Status: Offline Posts: 1111 |
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A Coreidae Nymph - An unidentified nymph from the order Coreidae. This Coreid was found on one of the Sunday birding walks at a forest near Bangalore, India. Shot with the Sony A700 and the Sigma 180mm macro. These are also called Squash Bugs in America.
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tpetpe ![]() Senior Member ![]() Joined: 30 December 2006 Location: Denmark Status: Offline Posts: 1472 |
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Hej Tue,
Thanks for the name info, and incedently for the aside, i had no idea bout the postman either :) ![]() ![]() These were from a friends appartment in Copenhagen Denmark, he has found three of them in reasonably short sucession. They are quite large (about 3mm body length). If anyone knows what species of pseudoscorpion they are he would be very interestead in hearing (hopefully not the only protected pseudoscorpion in denmar 'stellas'). One of his friends happens to have access to an electron microscope so we have asked if we can get one of them gold plated and a picture, if we get so lucly I will be sure to link it here. Oddly on the previous page there are some more of these shot with exactly the same setup, but the previous ones are much harder not to get a nasty flash glare than these. This is not nearly so shiny and a much more camera friendly species than the last. Tim Edited by tpetpe - 01 September 2011 at 21:15 |
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Ome Kees ![]() Senior Member ![]() Joined: 02 November 2010 Country: Netherlands Location: Noord-Holland Status: Offline Posts: 335 |
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busy bumblebee:
![]() aardhommel op zwanenbloem ( Bombus terrestris Butomus umbellatus ) by Cees Beets, on Flickr A550, 70400@400mm, f7.1, Flash. |
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pdeley ![]() Senior Member ![]() Joined: 05 June 2008 Country: United States Location: United States Status: Offline Posts: 2717 |
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The Crustacean empire strikes back!
![]() ![]() An isopod at the beach in the Philippines. It was literally dashing, as in scooting forward in high gear 5 inches at a time a100 with Tamron adaptall-2 35-70 f3.5-4.5 ![]() Lined shore crab enjoys seaweed salad for lunch a700 with quantaray tech10 50 f2.8 macro ![]() Crayfish strolling along the shore (probably not a wise choice for a hobby?) a700 with quantaray tech10 50 f2.8 macro Edited by pdeley - 01 September 2011 at 22:48 |
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a450, a500, a65, a7, 700si & other 35 mm bodies, Sig 15-30, sam 30 2.8 macro, Pentax 40 2.8 pan, Sig 70 f2.8 macro, Vivi 90 f2.8 macro, Mino 100-400 apo, 300 f4, 500 f8, 600 f4
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tpetpe ![]() Senior Member ![]() Joined: 30 December 2006 Location: Denmark Status: Offline Posts: 1472 |
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That crab is wonderful pedeley.
Alas the pseudoscorpion died today, but that meant that there was the oppertunity to get some stacked shots. There should be some 3d comming but at the moment there are some artifacts in those. The rest are up to about a 30x magnification on an a700 on an old compound trinocular microscope or a min 1x to 3x Tim ![]() ![]() ![]() If it is of interest to try the 3d there are some crosseyed work in progress shots here.. http://www.scientificillustration.net/_temp/pseudoscorpion_18.jpg http://www.scientificillustration.net/_temp/pseudoscorpion_17.jpg Tim |
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Serdar A ![]() Emeritus group ![]() Joined: 29 January 2009 Country: United States Location: Ridgeland, MS Status: Offline Posts: 7154 |
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