looks good - where do you see the CA?
The lighting looks very harsh - if you used flash try diffusing it more , if shooting on a bright sunny day try diffusing the sunlight aswell.
how do you diffuse the sunlight
how do you diffuse the sunlight
With a diffuser............ its not difficult you just place it between the sun and you subject
you need light to get a shadow! LOL
like what surely if you stop the light you get shadows :shrug:
to much light not enough light i,m confused:bang:
Your not stopping the light, your diffusing it to try and make it softer and stop it blowing all the detail you need in macro shots.
In the spiders web and the image doesn't look as clear as most i have seen.
It looks a little cropped and over sharpened to me.
A diffuser :shrug:
ok so what do you use to diffuse the light?
i thhink we all know its my shot now so,
1 its not ca,s, its in front of a glass window and the ca,s youre talking about is reflection off the glass behind the subject and shining through the web
2 i thought you needed to get as much light as possible on a macro due to the fact this was taken at f45 for max dof or am i wrong ?
Are you using flash ?
In the one below I've got a puffers on each of the flash heads of the MT24 and i've got sanded perspex glued onto those to give more diffusion - I've used milk bottle bottoms, fruit trays with tissue paper stretched over it, Grease proof paper all different blue peter specials - for diffusing sunlight I've got some plastic tubing with grease proof paper taped across is, but you can buy them.
You can see the reflections of te diffusers in the eyes - but theres not much blown out.
only on board flash but i diffuse it in doors with a piece of milk bottle cut to fit over the flash i didnt realise i needed it out doors
i thhink we all know its my shot now so,
1 its not ca,s, its in front of a glass window and the ca,s you're talking about is reflection off the glass behind the subject and shining through the web
2 i thought you needed to get as much light as possible on a macro due to the fact this was taken at f45 for max dof or am i wrong ?
At f45 your going to get lens diffraction which will cause softness -try not to go higher than f16 if you can - try experimenting to see how high you can go without noticing any IQ loss.
so dof and close focus actually dont go together
They do but you have to get the mixture right, are you using a macro lens?
no only a sigma 17-70 which is only 1|2.3 not quite half
it was out side on the window i was out there with it
it was out side on the window i was out there with it
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooo sorry i'm half asleep here haha. :bonk: