Tourmaline in quartz
schist, The tourmaline is about ½ inch long.
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Getting really close to a subject is not only more
interesting it can be fun and frustrating.
I have used extension tubes attached between the camera body and the
lens, and close-up lenses attached to the front of a zoom lens. The results weren’t too bad but I noticed the
depth of field (DOF) was noticeably shallow. Extension tubes worked best on
something where the depth of the object wasn’t that deep. I thought that maybe if I had a macro lens I
could get different results! After all
there are plenty of images out there to prove it even though some were focus
stacked.
After considerable research I decided to purchase a used
macro lens from mpb.com. The price of
the used lens was half of a new lens supposedly in excellent condition so I
opted for the Tamron 90 mm macro. If
this didn’t work out the loss wouldn’t hurt my pocket too much. It turned out
that this was the best decision I made.
The lens performs beyond my expectations!
Of course I immediately started shooting everything from
bolts and nuts to flowers, insects, and my rock collection. I did notice that the depth of field changed
as the distance from the camera to the subject increased or decreased. When the distance was at its smallest the DOF
was the shallowest. The other thing I noticed was the DOF would change when the
aperture changed. By how much did it change I wondered, so I did a little
experiment.
In my light cube, I placed a ruler vertically on a slant at an
angle of about 20 degrees where the far end of the ruler laid towards the back
of the light box, then marked off the
focus point with a piece of tape. I then
took four images at aperture settings of f/4.5, f8, f18, and f36 with the lens at
about 14 inches from the mark. I didn’t
use a tripod but the camera was hand held with my arms braced at the edge of
the platform.
f/4.5 1/8" DOF f/36 2" DOF
After processing the images I
filled a table with my observations where the endpoints were in focus just
before it went soft.
I then plotted the four
points in Excel and used a two degree polynomial to connect the points. Excel gave me the formula y = 0.0014x2
+ 0.0009x + 0.1155 which comes pretty close to my actual data.
The bottom line is the macro
lens is the less painful way to go for macro photography. The challenge begins when you go from
stationary objects to moving objects!
Carpenter Bee |
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