Photography
Related: About this forumA different kind of macro photography
Some of this is equipment specific (it is after all an infomercial) but the basic ideas are universal and may be an inspiration. It's about water droplets . . .
https://learnandsupport.getolympus.com/learn-center/photography-tips/macro/capturing-refraction-photography
CaliforniaPeggy
(149,739 posts)Me...not so much.
It's complex while giving amazing results.
Thanks for sharing.
AndyS
(14,559 posts)Not everybody is equipped or interested in studio work but it can be so rewarding, particularly when your lower back is dictating your activities .
CaliforniaPeggy
(149,739 posts)I'm not functioning all that well today, so perhaps I'm overly influenced by my current status.
The instructions do look awfully technical and complex!
I hear you about lower backs!
mitch96
(13,929 posts)when he gives us assignments. The Macro looks fantastic. Like little landscapes?
On another note Andy, which program do you use for post processing?
mitch
AndyS
(14,559 posts)but it is relatively inexpensive, you OWN it, can upgrade as you wish, is as user friendly as any I've tried (and I've not tried that many) and I've used it for a decade so I'm biased.
As with all software you can get a 30 day free trial which is just long enough to learn to open it and import a file but it's a start.
FYI, they all seem to be clones of each other with only minor navigation differences. Once you learn the nomenclature it's easy(er) to move to another.
mitch96
(13,929 posts)I got a EM-10 and it came with Olympus Workspace. Struggling... Like I said...Lots to learn..
Tnx for the input..
mitch