Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/08/03

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Subject: [Leica] Hope
From: kcarney1 at cox.net (Ken Carney)
Date: Tue, 03 Aug 2010 20:57:14 -0500
References: <28928454.1280884262088.JavaMail.root@elwamui-ovcar.atl.sa.earthlink.net> <1C3E892B-4954-4184-9E61-281D105079A0@mac.com>

Well, I would have squashed it on general principles, Ann or not.  
Especially if I needed to grill something.  Maybe next time I'll wait 
and look closer, unless of course it is a fiddleback.  Always much more 
to learn, and great photo also.

Ken Carney

On 8/3/2010 8:43 PM, George Lottermoser wrote:
> Thanks for your kind words Montie.
>
> This was one of those situations where it didn't go at all as planned.
> The evening before I made this one exposure
> Ann pointed out the subject to me when she discovered it
> had created a web between a porch wall and our grill.
> There was no light to speak of that evening.
> Ann asked me to "kill" it (she fears spiders).
> I replied, "Well I could destroy its new condominium
> and end its life and purpose on this earth.
> Or I could wait for the morning light to be right and make a lovely 
> photograph."
> The next morning I went out on the porch
> and the early morning sunlight was peeking between clouds and grazing the 
> web nicely.
> I turned around and walked upstairs to get the camera;
> and by the time I returned (under two minutes) to the subject
> the light was gone; complete and dense overcast;
> and the subject on a covered, aged cedar porch.
>
> I decided that I needed to "grab a shot"
> because by the time light became "ideal"
> the critter could be gone or dead or ?.
>
> I racked the 100 mm out to max magnification
> opened to 2.8, dialed in the correct exposure to 1/30th,
> took my "I am a tripod" on my knees stance,
> focused by swaying a minute amount back and forth;
> and bobbing up and down to rotate the plane a tad;
> and when I "saw" the photograph - squeezed off one shot.
> Chimped the screen to see if I "froze" anything - looked decent.
> Today - I worked it a minimal bit in Lightroom.
>
> Regards,
> George Lottermoser
> george at imagist.com
> http://www.imagist.com
> http://www.imagist.com/blog
> http://www.linkedin.com/in/imagist
>
>
>
>
>
> On Aug 3, 2010, at 8:11 PM, Montie Talbert wrote:
>
>    
>> Seems to me this is a particularly well done photo, George.
>>
>> Lighting, exposure, crisp detail and excellent
>> color rendition (right up to the tiny yellow pupils in
>> front of the eyes), I'm curious as to how this was lit??
>>
>> By design, I've done very little micro/macro/long FL,
>> just don't have the patience for working with DOFs measured
>> in mms or less :)  Glad others on this list feel differently
>> as much of the macro imagery posted here is stunning!'
>>
>> Montie
>>
>>
>>      
>>> Many of us (image posters) seem to be
>>>        
>> looking close these days
>>
>> Here's another macro
>>
>> <http://www.imagist.com/blog/?p=3217>
>>
>>      
>>> c&c always enjoyed
>>>        
>>
>> _______________________________________________
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>>      
>
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>
>    



In reply to: Message from montoid at earthlink.net (Montie Talbert) ([Leica] Hope)
Message from imagist3 at mac.com (George Lottermoser) ([Leica] Hope)