Dahlia Drops

It occurred to me to try to solve one of the practical problems I mentioned with extreme macro photography in my garden—waiting for the wind to completely stop so the subject is very still—using the slow flash technique that I wrote about here.

Except that, with these studies of a water drop on my dahlia, I mounted the Nikon SB-R200 flash units on a ring at the end of my lens rather than tripod mouinting them for backlighting. The point here was to stop motion, not provide a translucent effect.

These photos were exposed at roughly .4 of a second and f/36—plus the flash, of course. This works pretty well to stop motion on the surface of the water drops, I think.

Enjoy!

Dahlia Drop 3

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One Response to “Dahlia Drops”

  1. Photoblog 2.0: » Photoblog 2.0 Archive: » Morning Pink Says:

    [...] with pink, and as they did, so did I. Related images: Morning Star, Camellia Decolletage, Dahlia Drops. [200mm f/4 macro, 300mm in 35mm equivalent terms, 36mm extension tube, +4 diopter close- [...]

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