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more_rayne

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My first adult! :) This guy is very skittish. Most mantis will just chill on your hand, but this guy kept trying to run, though never flew. I set him on a piece of wood, he found a crevice and hid inside. I wonder if this species is like this.

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I have an adult female as well as a pair of sub adults.

Yes, they are quite fearful and skittish.

Nice male. You'll find that the females have 3 red jewels at the base of her crown. So regal looking.

Harry

 
Beautiful Mantis, like a forest elder in that woodland setting.

I really want a nice chuck of wood like all you guys have, really interesting twists.

 
Are you stacking the photos?
I'd be SERIOUSLY impressed if the last one is (pretty sure none of them are. Am I right? :unsure: ). They are some of the hardest insects to photograph around, or at least mine were, as they are in constant frantic motion.

I like the brown wings by the way! Mine were teal :)

 
Very nice pix, and like Yeatzee, I'd be very surprised (as in amazed) if any of these were stacked.

@Slinkttreekreeper: In the US you can buy driftwood at aquarium stores. You might want to give that a try.

 
Thanks Phil, I'll check out the fishy places. Is driftwood safe to use without boiling or putting in the oven.

I mentioned stacked as the DOF is huge, not cos it looked stitched or anything - flawless image from here. I can only guess that the headhsot was f12 or f16 to accomplish that at these mags, is this any where close More_Rayne?

So either my mantis scales are all wrong (again) or the mpe lens performs amazingly at tiny apertures. I guess there would be a 3rd option and the mantis has a really flat head. :lol:

 
Ooops, my bad. I checked the exif and I actually used the 100mm macro at f/11. This guy was too big, didn't need the mp-e 65. The camera was parallel to the plane of this guy's head, so his whole head was in focus.

 
Aha, it was the long smooth focus falloff along with the large DOF that made me think high aperture. I was so very wrong about size though, lol.

I do have a small request though if I may Rayne. Next time you use the MPE would you mind taking a shot at 5x at f8 and f16? I would also really like to know if a single speedlite is enough light for these shots if that is what you shoot with?

There's no rush but I would REALLY like to know if you can help with this one.

Cheers

 
Beautiful! I was just taking shots of my adult pair today. I like them better now that they have wings. They're much calmer.

Are you using a flash? I've been taking most of my macros at ISO 100, 1/200, f32 with the MT-24EX flash making up the difference using ETTL. If you have a flash and use these settings you won't get any antenna blur and you can shoot freehand. f32 gives the widest DOF. Sometimes I prefer f22 or lower just to maintain the close-up feel, but generally I want to catch as much anatomical detail as possible.

 
Beautiful! I was just taking shots of my adult pair today. I like them better now that they have wings. They're much calmer.

Are you using a flash? I've been taking most of my macros at ISO 100, 1/200, f32 with the MT-24EX flash making up the difference using ETTL. If you have a flash and use these settings you won't get any antenna blur and you can shoot freehand. f32 gives the widest DOF. Sometimes I prefer f22 or lower just to maintain the close-up feel, but generally I want to catch as much anatomical detail as possible.
Yes, I use an off camera flash. For bugs in general I like to use ISO 200, 1/200, and usually don't go beyond f11, I don't like diffraction. The main purpose of my photography is to create art, I concentrate on composition and lighting. Mantids just happen to be one of my subjects. I like shallow DOF because I like to separate my subject from the background. If I was shooting bugs for say a scientific book, then my settings would change. I would then use f32 and stack photos.

 
Yes, I use an off camera flash. For bugs in general I like to use ISO 200, 1/200, and usually don't go beyond f11, I don't like diffraction. The main purpose of my photography is to create art, I concentrate on composition and lighting. Mantids just happen to be one of my subjects. I like shallow DOF because I like to separate my subject from the background. If I was shooting bugs for say a scientific book, then my settings would change. I would then use f32 and stack photos.
I hear ya. I'm still in the phase when I'm just fascinated with seeing all the detail I can't with the naked eye. I like to see all the topography of the carapace. All those intersecting curves and planes, patterns and textures are like an alien landscape. Once I get that out of my system maybe I'll feel ready for the more artistic aspects of photography.

But for the record, if you ever do plan on doing scientific-style stacks a shallow depth of field is recommended, some say as low as f6 or f8, in order to better assist the software in selecting only the sharpest focus from each image.

Wish I had an MP-E65! Maybe some day...

 
But for the record, if you ever do plan on doing scientific-style stacks a shallow depth of field is recommended, some say as low as f6 or f8, in order to better assist the software in selecting only the sharpest focus from each image.
Thanks for the tip, I'll keep that in mind when I intend to stack.

 
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