They're pretty big fellas and there are a few of them around the garden (as well as in the house) making themselves useful catching flies. Normally one has managed to get a cobweb all the way across the garden as well, not the best way to be woken up in the morning as you stumble out in the dark to get the bike.
Because the web was in a really cramped place it was too close to use the Minolta 70-210 "beercan" and the Tamron 70-300 can be a bit soft sometimes. I had to try out the Sigma 24-70 as a macro, in all fairness it does describe itself as a macro lens but it hasn't got the same magnification ratio as the zooms.
I really like this lens attached to the Sony Alpha 700 and I'm getting a bit more brave with the f-stop recently. It stops out to f2.8 which I'm always worried will be a bit soft but the background 'Bokeh' (who came up with that word?) looks brilliant with that wide aperture. I tried the lens wide open for some portraits at school recently and as long as the focus is clear on the eyes they look really effective.
I really like this lens attached to the Sony Alpha 700 and I'm getting a bit more brave with the f-stop recently. It stops out to f2.8 which I'm always worried will be a bit soft but the background 'Bokeh' (who came up with that word?) looks brilliant with that wide aperture. I tried the lens wide open for some portraits at school recently and as long as the focus is clear on the eyes they look really effective.
*UPDATE* (!)
So, inspired by writing the blog above I wandered out into the garden when it was dark and probably weirded out the neighbours a bit by taking the 'Wotan' slave flash out and having a go at a bit of creative lighting.
Saying that, I was really happy with the photo below. The shadow picks out the spider really well and I think it give a good line to the photo, if you look at it large the spider's back looks almost be-jewelled with water droplets.
For these last two images I managed to get behind and underneath the cobweb, it was a bit of a nightmare seeing as I was sat on a plant and wedged into the corner of my fence under the apple tree. They came out well though, it was the look I was hoping for with the spider picked out against the dark sky.
The hardest part of all of this was trying to focus on a little spider in the pitch black (the flash auto-focus lamp was no help at all) which kept moving around whenever the wind blew. I ended up using a torch to pick it out and using manual focus to try and get it.
All in all, I enjoyed taking these photos and will have another go at insects at some point during the holidays when I can be up early in the AM to get some good misty morning insect macros.
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