This thread is dedicated to close-range photographic captures utilising macro-optical imaging configurations to achieve greater reproduction ratios. Got it? Good now upload some shit.
>>4498425 >>4498426 that guy forgot to say that the lens was 18mm and focuses 5mm in front of the lens. apparently you can't do manual focus staking with wide lenses as the working distance is too small. and end up touching the subject or unusable size distortion i ended up buying the Tamron new on sale for 500 euro, laowa was 450. now kind of regret it after playing with the Tamron and kind of getting the hang of handheld focus staking. but for non moving subjects tammy is perfect. now i m waiting for godox 860iii to go on sale to get a powerful reliable flash. but i m kind of torn between getting the laowa (500 euro again) or reynox 250 (70 euro). tammy and reynox give 1.8 mag compared with laowa native 2x. i have also 36mm extension tubes that i can use to increase tammy and reynox mag but i don;t know the actual resulting working distance and iq. 30 stack
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Anonymous02/23/26(Mon)18:38:47
has anyone tried stacking those macro lens filters?
>>4498494 yip, you use the more intense, more protruding ones on the outer side and the less strong ones on the inner side
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Anonymous02/23/26(Mon)23:12:12
>>4498454 Don't bother with the Raynox or tubes, screwing it on and off is too much of a hassle And consider going for the Godox MK12, it's a dedicated macro flash that's sometimes more, sometimes less useful than a proper on-camera flash
I have a 100 2.8 macro which I use for scanning and the ocasional portrait/detail shot. I cant get into macro pictures because they freak me out, especially bc I have intense trypophobia (google it at your own risk) and everything seems to have little holes in it when you zoom in. On the other hand I think its very interesting looking at things close up, maybe I need exposure therapy
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Anonymous02/24/26(Tue)06:55:20
>>4498521 raynox have some clip on clip - off system. that is why i m considering it godox mk12 kit is more expensive (almost 2x times - you get 2 flashes and 1 trigger though ) and seems harder to diffuse. considering the 860 as is very powerful and can be used as a normal flash for other types of photos. i suppose that mk12 could be too. will put it on my wish list. if it comes on sale at good price i ll consider it
>>4498563 Macro flashes don't need to be diffused to the same extent because they're usually much closer to the subject (diffusion is most effective at mid-range flash distances) Also the idea behind the MK is more sculpturing and less uniform exposure
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Anonymous02/28/26(Sat)00:59:28
>>4498494 yeah i got some cheap ones and put a doublet element in front that i took from a vintage manual zoom lens, total is 4 additional elements on top of a zoom PnS
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Anonymous03/04/26(Wed)14:51:53
>>4476905 >A well done beginners shot like most in this thread. What the FUCK did you just call my photographic capture!?
Hi /mage/ I took my first ever macro shots, nailing the focus while the subject is walking with such a small DOF is insanely hard. I just try to move the camera back and forth to focus and leave it in manual because the autofocus is useless.
I use a D750 and an old AF Micro Nikkor 60mm f/2.8, any idea when diffraction starts ruining your shots at high apertures? I didn't dare to go above f/11. Also it's not the D version so no communication with the built in flash. Is it worth using a macro flash or is it overkill?
Hey lads, I want to try macro photography but I only have a Sony R100 III, it has a fixed lens and it's not particularly successful at doing good closeups. Are there any ways to make it work still? Maybe with a rig that has a magnifier in front or something?
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esdeekid ((tiger))03/18/26(Wed)22:21:53
>roll
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Anonymous03/19/26(Thu)22:07:36
>>4501197 Close up filters. You won't be able to screw one onto your lens, but if you find some other way to attach it, it should work.
>>4501399 also anybody knows ho to avoid this fucking halos around subjects during stacking? zerene and helicon bot get them. tried using the settings they suggest but still get them
also if i have subjects in the foreground and background they het this halos around them and they get blended together like one object Pic related
>>4501361 Neat, I'll figure something out then. Thanks for the suggestion.
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Anonymous03/20/26(Fri)21:30:58
>>4501197 >>4501361 Raynox do close up filters that clamp onto the lens, and you can also get a Magfilter adapter which is what I have.
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Anonymous03/21/26(Sat)04:33:27
>>4501481 Not that anon but what magnifier adaptor Just bought nisi 49mm 9 diopter. Was cheaper than raynox on sale but does not have the clip on adapter
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Anonymous03/21/26(Sat)08:07:57
>>4501481 does the magfilter hold well with the Raynox? It looks a bit bulky. Might just go that route, it will also open up some possibility to use other filters.
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Anonymous03/21/26(Sat)08:55:27
>>4501481 The filter grabs the lens by inside thread not from outisde. Just check some reviews an how it works. Might not have anything to grab on that lens. You could try some rubber tube that fits your lens and the adaptor diameter. There are some rubber lens hoods, quite cheap on aliexpress that you could adapt
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Anonymous03/21/26(Sat)12:01:29
>>4501499 Oh I was thinking of the DCR-250 but it clamps internally on the filter threads, my mistake. >>4501521 The Raynox is a fairly small bit of glass at 49mm and then the rest is plastic, I have a larger 58mm Canon close up lens with a metal filter thread that I use on mine and it holds fine even shaking the camera about.
>>4506681 This is fantastic. Respectfully, and without starting a race riot what's the general consensus on m43 versus full frame for macro, specifically handheld field stuff? The increased magnification and depth of field seems eminently useful.
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Anonymous04/26/26(Sun)23:13:13
>>4506766 Full frame is better period. Just carry a powerful wirelessly triggered flash.
m43 is better for poors, weak femboys, people who dont know macro literally always needs flash, and homos who expect handheld focus bracketing of non-dead things to actually work
Thanks anons. Handheld macro with a flash in off hand is quite the challenge. That spider turned out way more interesting than I thought it would when I spotted it
I'm a beginner buying used gear (except the cards and flash, no good deals by the time the lens arrived) and free software, still learning. If it helps encourage others in the same boat exposure on spider was f22, 1/125, ISO 640 (auto), and flash ofc held in left hand. Exported by NX Studio (free app) without any edits. Only cost me around $1650 AUD all up
>$850 for D850 w grip >$400 Sigma 105mm OS >$80 Godox XPro trigger >$300 Godox V480 (new) >$25 Sandisk 64GB SD card (new)
I got lucky on a crazy good deal on the D850 though. Around 120,000 snaps on it.
Yet to try focus stacking as I spend enough time as is on one and done pics, but I know the D850 has focus shift built in for when I'm on a tripod and made sure to get a lens that supported it. Also keen to get a TC or extension tubes to go past 1:1.
Pic is what I saw with my eye more or less, just a bunch of spider fuzz.
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Anonymous04/28/26(Tue)19:49:51
>>4506802 What's the difference between an on-camera flash (with a diffuser) and handheld? Are you still using the shutter button to trigger it? Do you use a diffuser for off-camera flashes? Shooting a d850 one handed is impressive.
>>4507077 >>4507032 The single most based way to do photography is with a newspress 4x5 in one hand, a sodium bulb flash in the other, and two cigars in your mouth at all times.