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Flower With a Little Buzz

PostPosted: Fri Apr 08, 2005 2:33 pm
by SoCal Steve
It's Spring time and the bugs have to get busy. I had to wait awhile for one of these little guys to light on the flower I was focused on. I clicked off about a dozen (as Kerry would say) so-so shots. The very first turned out to be about the best one. 105mm Nikkor Micro with off-camera SB-800 flash.

The image here seems a little desaturated compared to the original image on my computer monitor. Does anyone else experience this?:roll: I just had my monitor calibrated with a last weekend using a friend's new Spyder system.

Image

PostPosted: Fri Apr 08, 2005 2:40 pm
by PiroStitch
Love the DOF on the photo. Have you applied any pp to it to bump up the colours? On my screen it does look a bit desaturated. I've had that experience before when I look on the LCD it looks great, but on screen doesn't look as good. I guess the only way you can really tell is by printing it out as an actual photo.

Noticed the SB800 lighting up the bee's butt like a firefly :P

PostPosted: Fri Apr 08, 2005 3:00 pm
by KerryPierce
Doesn't look so-so to me, Steve. That's a very nice pic. Good color, especially the reds, sharp, etc. Nicely done! :)

Re: Flower With a Little Buzz

PostPosted: Fri Apr 08, 2005 3:05 pm
by sheepie
SoCal Steve wrote:...The very first turned out to be about the best one....

lol - isn't that so often the case!

I like this one - the bee is nice and sharp, and well exposed. Don't know if others would agree, but have you tried cropping some of the left side of the flower out, to make it more a portrait-orientation? I think this may give some benefit.

PostPosted: Fri Apr 08, 2005 5:01 pm
by sirhc55
Steve - a nicely balanced, colourfull and well caught pic - our spring starts in September :roll:

PostPosted: Fri Apr 08, 2005 9:29 pm
by Killakoala
A callistemon, in California?????? What else do we export to you guys? :)

The D70 seems to oversaturate reds so maybe that's something to do with the photo, which looks fine to me.

PostPosted: Sat Apr 09, 2005 12:16 am
by stubbsy
Steve (as in SoCal)

Just to amplify Steve (as in killakoala) 's comment. That's an Australian native flower in the shot called a Callistemon or bottle brush as it's common name.

There's an irony that someone in SoCal is posting a shot on an Aussie forum of an aussie native flower! BTW Nice shot.

Edit - so far as colour saturation, this postmay be of help

PostPosted: Sat Apr 09, 2005 12:54 am
by mic
Nice & Crisp Steve,

Well done, I'm glad the little Bees not flying around the other way faceing us, otherwise we would see his Bees D--k with your focusing abilities :shock:

Mic. :wink:

Colour looks nice on my monitor.

PostPosted: Sat Apr 09, 2005 1:18 am
by marcus
This is a great shot Steve, well done, love the bee. As others have mentioned it's quite amazing (for us aussies) to see a "Bottle Brush" blooming at this time of the year.
Everyone here would call them a bottle brush, is there a common name like that for them in the States?

PostPosted: Sat Apr 09, 2005 4:20 am
by Soulboy
That's a super shot. And it's the exact reason why I want my first lens to be the 105mm Macro.

PostPosted: Sat Apr 09, 2005 6:50 am
by stubbsy
marcus wrote:This is a great shot Steve, well done, love the bee. As others have mentioned it's quite amazing (for us aussies) to see a "Bottle Brush" blooming at this time of the year.
Everyone here would call them a bottle brush, is there a common name like that for them in the States?

ummmm. Marcus I still have flowers on one of my callistemons

PostPosted: Sat Apr 09, 2005 7:40 am
by SoCal Steve
Stubbsy, Thanks for that thread. Spot on point. I'm printing it out to give it a thorough read.

Killakoala wrote:A callistemon, in California?????? What else do we export to you guys? :)


Everything that can make life more enjoyable seems to make its way to California sooner or later. Surely we export a few things from "up-over" here in HollywoodLand that give you guys some pleasure (or at least that you can point and laugh your ass off about). I think most people here call it a bottle brush, too, but I'm a pretty dim bulb when it comes to plants. If it doesn't come it a container with a little sign, then... duh!

Seriously, the climate is so damn moderate in Southern California that it's never too hot for hot weather plants and never too cold for most cold weather plants. Northern California is about 10 degrees cooler on average. I do think it would be nice to really get to watch the seasons change sometimes though.

Thanks for the photo comments. Everything well taken, all. :D