Was happy with the way this shot came out,to an extent.
Please critique it. Good, bad, ugly, I can take it.
I didn't want to, but had to resort to, removing floaters on the water in Gimp.
I'm still hooked on this "Glowing" thing. Well anyway I like the effect it gives the scene.
This image was brighter, yet I felt the darker mood more appealing.
I have one with him looking up at the lens, yet he looks more lifeful checking out his reflection.
I am not happy with his front leg looking a lil blown still.
I would have liked the reflection clearer, yet his movements were preventing it.
That's turned out quite well Mitchell. Lighting is still not perfect, but you're getting some reasonbly sharp shots.
Dave
Lighting was a bit of an issue, trying not to get the water blown out. I went for less rather than more. This image had the curves adjusted, it was well lit in the original.
I wouldn't say this is a particularly sharp shot, infact it is very OOF.
I am actually going to take it as a learning experience. I know now I can do it better next time.
I realised I cropped the eyes out of the reflection. Heres another version, straight out of the camera. No PP except for removing floaters.
I think I find this version more appealing. Actually it is probably much better, now that I think about it.
Excellent, looks "narrowband"ish ;-)the colour saturation is better on the 1st one, and to my untrained eye, the right leg leg area is a bit saturated (brightness)?. I havent seen a macro pic quite like it lighting wise, very nice.
Awsome pic but ewwwww to the ugly hairy creepy thing
Jen, it's a Jumping Spider, Salticidae family. They are amazing spiders, very intelligent, probably the most intelligent of all spiders. They are very small, the largest no bigger than 2cm, on average around 8mm in body length. They won't hurt you too. They are very curious, and very friendly, non aggressive spiders. If you want to start taming a fear of Arachnophobia, these are the best spiders to work with imho. Been there, done that.
I was wondering why you don't venture much into the "terrestrial/macro" scene on this site. Now I know... Very funny indeed!!
yep thats why i only come in here when ive had a few cans and think i am brave enough to face those god dam ugly hairy scary things ewwwwww Spider spray anyone
Jen, it's a Jumping Spider, Salticidae family. They are amazing spiders, very intelligent, probably the most intelligent of all spiders. They are very small, the largest no bigger than 2cm, on average around 8mm in body length. They won't hurt you too. They are very curious, and very friendly, non aggressive spiders. If you want to start taming a fear of Arachnophobia, these are the best spiders to work with imho. Been there, done that.
Dave
2cm my butt it looks like its bigger than my head LMAO And OMG the eyes he staring me out from all angles
Oh hell no i couldnt play with one of those OMG its soooo ugly Why is it glowing
2cm my butt it looks like its bigger than my head LMAO And OMG the eyes he staring me out from all angles
Oh hell no i couldnt play with one of those OMG its soooo ugly Why is it glowing
That's funny 'cause to me he is adorable!! Very cute and furry like a lil' teddy bear.
It's not "Glowing", just its skin is reacting to the exposure. The white of the skin gives a glowing effect under some exposures conditions....
Well to tell you the truth I am not sure, but they don't "glow in the dark".
I have noticed on different spiders different apendages and body segments "glow" differently...
That's funny 'cause to me he is adorable!! Very cute and furry like a lil' teddy bear.
It's not "Glowing", just its skin is reacting to the exposure. The white of the skin gives a glowing effect under some exposures conditions....
Well to tell you the truth I am not sure, but they don't "glow in the dark".
I have noticed on different spiders different apendages and body segments "glow" differently...
Weird, I am still trying to figure it out myself.
a cute furry little teddy bear NOT....... i will never look at a teddy the same ever again
What sort of teddys do you have they are evil haha
They look ok for postage stamp size
I normally don't take notice of stamps on incoming mail (ironic since I used to collect as a kid) but this one caught my eye given there's been a few posts here recently on jumping spiders.
Mitchell, I just noticed your natural light Jumper shot - if I can suggest avoiding such deep DOF such as f22. It'll create diffraction issues (you'll get more DOF at the cost of image sharpness) and it makes it far harder on you ISO and shutter speed wise. Better to stick around f8-f11 on modern DSLR sensors imho.