Learning to fly

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My family is making an international move in the next year, and we are saying our goodbyes to our beautiful desert. This photo was taken while we were enjoying a beautiful sunset in the foothills of Mt. Lemmon. I’m documenting my son’s place of birth as much as I can, so that he knows where he came from. The country we are moving to is lush and green, but Arizona is truly extraordinary, with exquisite sunsets, light, and resilient life! This place will forever hold a special place in our hearts, and I hope to communicate this to our son through my images.

Reblogged from fstoppers.com

The fly

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This fly was sitting on a pink flower at the morning after a rainy night.
Stacking is fun!

And how do you manage to capture more than 50 shots of a fly in dewdrops without killing it? Read this 😉

I don’t like killing animals, even if it is a fly. Specially for photography purpose I love the challenge to shoot living objects. Thats tricky and needs some experience and it takes a lot of time.

THIS IS how my day STARTS:
Usually I get up 2hours before sunrise, on a day as calm as I can get it and when there was a temperature drop at night, slightly below the freezing point. I jump into warm clothes – don’t underestimate the temperatures when you have to crawl as quietly as you can be through the wet meadows and woods 😉 it’s not really crawling but you have to move slowly and take care not to move the grass to much. The insects flight distance is seriously reduced but they’re still alive!
So I pack my things (list below) and go out for hunting. Sometimes it takes 5 minutes and sometimes I go home really frustrated without a shot. But thats part of the challenge and its even more fun if I get a cool shot finally.

SETUP
This day I found the fly sitting on a flower and the dewdrops covered her body. That was my opportunity and this is where the time is starting to work against me!

So I got my tripod with the ballhead and the two way macro slider to adjust the camera exactly. Two Yongnou flashes for the lighting and a reflector to block the sun light – constant light conditions are neccessary for such a venture. My lens was a Sigma 105mm 2.8 Macro lens, which I love and for this pictures of course, the Raynox DCR250 close up lens.

So when the setup is done, I connected my camera via USB3.0 Cable to my macbook and started HeliconRemote so I could adjust the camera right and test the settings (no worry, the flash isn’t frightening the insects).

If everything is done, I let the software what it’s supposed to do and with Mirror lock-up activated – vibrations are the death of tack sharp images 😉 – It takes about 5 minutes to shoot a bit more than 50 shots and if you’re lucky, the insect will not fly away during that period… But – because I work with living objects, they probably move the feelers a bit. You wont even recognize that but you’ll see that as big difference in the post production.

POST PRODUCTION
I was lucky this time and that’s where my PostProduction starts. It takes me about 5 hours to stack and retouch it.

I start with minor adaptions in LIGHTROOM:
– optimizing the white balance
– increasing the shadows
– bringing back some highlights
– playing with the camera calibration
– slightly adjusting the colors a bit

Then I export the full resolution 16bit TIFF Files for HeliconFocus and let that stack it together. It’s always a bit of experimenting with the stacking options and most of the time I end up with to pictures I manually blend in Photoshop

the next step in PHOTOSHOP
Manually blending means, that some of the parts are better in the first pic and some are better in the other one but the challenge are the feelers as I mentioned before… They were moving… And 1/100 of an inch feels like 1 feet on your screen in Photoshop! So the feelers have to be blended manually. That and the “errors” that the stacking software produces are the main part of this work.

After that I import that (about 2GB picture) back into lightroom and do my final adjustments.

Thats it, and now I’m gonna get me something for lunch ^^

Reblogged from fstoppers.com

Waterfall

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Seljalandsfoss is one of the best known waterfalls in Iceland and it’s possible to walk behind it, but I gotta tell you the mist coming from it doesn’t make it that easy at all to take a picture! It’s pretty crazy! But the feeling you get when you get out of there all wet from head to toe with your gear is amazing!
This waterfall of the river Seljalandsá drops 60 metres over the cliffs of the former coastline.

Reblogged from fstoppers.com