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Thread: fly pictures

  1. #1

    Angry fly pictures

    Could anyone advise as to the best way to take pics of flies.I have a 8mp digital camera and cannot get a good closeup pic of these,no matter what i do.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jul 2010
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    Shelburn,IN
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    do you have it on Macro mode?
    and do you have a white background and lots of light?

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Mar 2010
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    bozone, mt
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    If you use the "search" form on this FAOL website you will find several good articles written by Al Campbell.

    Most small point and shoot digi cameras have a "macro" mode that makes surprisingly good photos with available light.
    If you work indoors you will have to set the camera's "white balance" setting to "incandescent"

    If you want to progress beyond that you might want to build a "light tent." Al (and others) have suggested using a gallon plastic bottle. Cut holes in the bottle so the vise jaws can be inside the plastic jug, with the jug oriented horizontally. Cut out the bottom of the jug so the camera will see (perhaps) a sky blue background made with construction paper. Put a few small "study" lights around the jug. Take some photos.
    If your camera has a "manual exposure" mode, experiment with it.

    Beyond that you would need studio lighting, which is expensive. A pair of 400 watt umbrella strobes from Alien Bees is about $600 bucks.
    A pair of top-of-the-line professional strobe lights would cost about $3000

    If you are working with a digital camera (not film), regardless quality, you absolutely have to edit the images with image editing software, if you don't want to be disappointed anyway. GIMP (general image manipulation program) is free. And it is very good. And it runs on Windoze, MacIntosh and Linux. Photoshop is better. But it is expensive.

    The following photo shows a primitive light tent made with curtain material (sewing store), foam slabs, a hot glue gun, wire hoops and "study" lights. Strobes are better (a lot better). But the incandescent light tent is pretty good. The gallon milk jug light tent is easier to make than this one.

    Last edited by pittendrigh; 03-05-2012 at 10:49 PM.

  4. #4

    Lightbulb It really is about the macro ...

    ... but beyond that, it can be as simple as you want or as complicated as you need it to be.

    I use an Olympus 850SW for all my pixels. It has a couple macro settings. I pick one, leave my fly tying lamp on, put a sheet of green or tan closed cell foam behind the fly for background, and fire away.






    Simple as that. My computer, with Adobe for My Pictures, does some rudimentary "auto correction". Sometimes that improves the image as shot, and sometimes it doesn't. I choose whichever strikes me as the better pic to post.

    John
    The fish are always right.

  5. #5

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    1. Use a tripod for best results. The camera, provided it has a macro setting, is secondary at best.
    2. Shoot against a neutral background. I use cardstock. I have a bunch of different colors, but 95% of the time I use eggshell blue (which is also my fly tying backdrop).
    3. Use good light. I have a pair of Daylight lamps, one aimed down and slightly away from the camera (toward the backdrop) and one aimed up and slightly away from the camera. I NEVER use flash for fly photos.
    4. Adjust the white balance of the camera to reflect the type of light you're using. Since I use daylight lamps, I use the fluorescent-natural light setting on my Pentax K20D.

    I have sold about 60 pictures shot this way, and every fly photo at www.parksflyshop.com was shot with this setup.

  6. #6

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    I have a inexpensive Canon Powershot A590 with Macro and the Kodak Play Sport without Macro. I take pictures with a good light, or plain old daylight, cool looking back ground of what ever. But, I find if I take the picture a little farther away so it is nice and focused, then crop it in the Photobucket, or whatever photo software you might use.




  7. #7
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    Grand Junction CO. U.S.A.
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    It's all about the beer. The more you drink the better your pictures will look!




  8. #8

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    I like that picture!!!!!!

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Oct 2011
    Location
    1204 W. Vine St. Taylorville, IL 62568
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    Here's what I use. It's a desktop magnifying light I'm shooting through. It doesn't magnify the fly much, but it blurs out the background and provides a ring of light around the fly. You can use any background, I used a black coat for the shots below.

    Here's the results:


    Separate your observations from your preconceptions. See what is, not what you expect.

  10. #10

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    Don't go too crazy with the setup. Most computer screens have limited resolutions not to mention that most don't calibrated their monitors for the best colors and certainly we don't calibrate to the the specs used by the photographer.
    Trout don't speak Latin.

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