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  1. Galleries
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  3. Macro and Flora
  4. » Grasshopper

 
Grasshopper...

Macro

View gallery (12 photos)

Grasshopper sent on January 19, 2019 (14:41) by Pamela Campana. 10 comments, 340 views. [retina]

at 154mm, 1/200 f/5.6, ISO 100, hand held.




View High Resolution 4.9 MP  



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avatarsupporter
sent on January 19, 2019 (21:35) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Great detail. Free hand or easel?

avatarjunior
sent on January 19, 2019 (21:53) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Thanks. Mano libera

avatarsupporter
sent on January 20, 2019 (9:54) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Unfortunately a bit of missing parallelism has no advantage in order to achieve better sharpness.

avatarsenior
sent on January 20, 2019 (10:19) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Hi Pamela, maybe the free hand shooting has cost you a bit in general sharpness. I know something, because I've made several to a similar subject. By the way, since I have a similar, a friend of the forum pointed out to me that it is not a grasshopper, but a locust, with its beautiful winter mantle.
Hello, Alessandro.

avatarsenior
sent on January 20, 2019 (13:59) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Hello, given that I like your photo here is an explanation, quite simple between Grasshopper and locust, and I do not want the entomologues:
"Grasshopper or locust?
Many people think that they are two different animals... In fact, The Locust is an adapted version of the Grasshopper. We could say that this animal has a double personality. While the grasshopper is a harmless animal, which lives in the fields jumping and fluttering, the locust represents a real plague, since it eats and destroys all the vegetation it finds on its way.
Following a real metamorphosis, the grasshoppers become locust when they feed enough that they can grow and begin to adopt Gregarian habits. A way to take even more advantage of the presence of similar specimens. "
A greeting
Umberto

avatarjunior
sent on January 20, 2019 (15:19) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Pigi47 help me understand the parallelism... They're fledgling... Thank you

avatarsupporter
sent on January 21, 2019 (10:18) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

help me understand the parallelism

you have to consider that sensor and subject must be as parallel as possible, so you can avoid that part of the subject is sharp and the other is not. Certainly freehand is not easy, you can always help if the subject and his position allows him lying on the ground pointing the elbows, or with one knee on the ground and the other uses it as a support. Always standing when possible supports a shoulder to a tree or a wall, this allows you in addition to avoiding as much as possible the move even to be able to concentrate on the parallelism since you will have less ease of moving. All these evolutions better make them early in the morning when still the subjects are not in business.


avatarjunior
sent on January 21, 2019 (12:34) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Sorriso Pigi47 thanks

avatarjunior
sent on January 22, 2019 (21:39) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Andros thanks

avatarjunior
sent on January 22, 2019 (21:39) | This comment has been automatically translated (show/hide original)

Umbi54 thanks




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