Lost in the Funhouse

It’s very hard with a photo like this water drop on my leucospermum to see what one is doing. For all its apparent shallowness of focus, this is a high depth-of-field photo. Using the depth-of-field preview, things get so dark that I can’t really see. The LCD display after I’ve taken the photograph doesn’t really show anything in bright, high-contrast light. If you don’t believe me about this, just try squinting at the sun and then looking at one of these displays. Trust me, you won’t be able to see diddly.

So it is nice to have an image emerge that shows sun stars within the water bubble, and the stamen from the leucospermum flower reflected within the water drop just like a roller coaster in an amusement park. Giant worlds in a very small cosmos!

Taken with my Nikon D200, 200 f/4 macro lens with 64mm of extension tubes and a +4 diopter close-up filter, at f/32 and 1/5 of a second.

Keep in touch with what Harold is doing! For news, tips, techniques and special offers related to Harold's work and digital photography subscribe to the Harold Davis Photography email newsletter.

Yosemite Cover 100 Views of the Golden Gate Light & Exposure for Digital Photographers


Harold buys most of his digital photo equipment from B&H.

One Response to “Lost in the Funhouse”

  1. Photoblog 2.0: » Photoblog 2.0 Archive: » Sunshine and Water Drops on a Papaver Stem Says:

    […] e water drops on a poppy stem backlight by the early morning sun using the setup described here.

    This entry was posted

    on Wednesday, June 7th, 2006 […]

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.