Lighting for macro photography of fern gametophytes
Moderators: rjlittlefield, ChrisR, Chris S., Pau
Hello :-)
I have been to visit a collaborator at the Sainsbury Laboratory here in Cambridge and I photographed some of his Arabidopsis leaf hairs (trichomes). The trichomes are very glass-like and the compilation in Helicon focus hasn't worked very well, I think because of diffraction. I wondered if anyone might have an idea of where I am going wrong? I also did not get my black background right, so I think I need to work on that.
Thanks!
I have been to visit a collaborator at the Sainsbury Laboratory here in Cambridge and I photographed some of his Arabidopsis leaf hairs (trichomes). The trichomes are very glass-like and the compilation in Helicon focus hasn't worked very well, I think because of diffraction. I wondered if anyone might have an idea of where I am going wrong? I also did not get my black background right, so I think I need to work on that.
Thanks!
Nice, but some of those single leaf stacks should have been deeper. The trichome spikes closest to the camera are not in focus, but could have been if you had started the stack higher up. When you are determining the limits of the stack, it is very easy to miss those kinds of details. It helps to look the output on a larger monitor.
Hi,
I just got an email from someone who wants to make a proper film about fern gametophytes. I'm interested to help and have written back, but I just wondered if I could mention here in case anyone else would like to contribute?
This is the email:
(Please PM if you would like the email address to reply to. )
I have been recommended by Andrew Leonard to get in contact with you regarding a short documentary I am currently producing. I am a student at the National Film and Television School and am currently working on a film about the alternation of generations in ferns, including its evolutionary implications and placement in the timeline of land plants. I am looking for some help with fact consolidation but also for access to archive footage or a microscope and a fern gametophyte to demonstrate the complexity and scale of the different life stages. I understand these may be unrealistic or difficult demands to meet, and that you may not have the time for such a project, but the films from my school often get a high degree of attention and I am hoping the same may go for my film – if not just to educate people in an entertaining way.
I just got an email from someone who wants to make a proper film about fern gametophytes. I'm interested to help and have written back, but I just wondered if I could mention here in case anyone else would like to contribute?
This is the email:
(Please PM if you would like the email address to reply to. )
I have been recommended by Andrew Leonard to get in contact with you regarding a short documentary I am currently producing. I am a student at the National Film and Television School and am currently working on a film about the alternation of generations in ferns, including its evolutionary implications and placement in the timeline of land plants. I am looking for some help with fact consolidation but also for access to archive footage or a microscope and a fern gametophyte to demonstrate the complexity and scale of the different life stages. I understand these may be unrealistic or difficult demands to meet, and that you may not have the time for such a project, but the films from my school often get a high degree of attention and I am hoping the same may go for my film – if not just to educate people in an entertaining way.
Hello!
Just popping in to post a few photos to wish you all a Merry Christmas when it comes.
I got follow-on funding from my grant to buy a new computer and the photography has got radically easier now that I can stack images in 10 seconds rather than 90 minutes. Yay!
Here is the obligatory tiny fern:
and this is a hair inside the trap on a venus fly trap:
This is a zoom in on the hinge that triggers closing of the trap after it is bent three times. You can also see the glands in the trap that secrete the digestive enzymes. My undergraduate supervisor Emeritus Professor Malcolm B. Wilkins told me that that's what they are. I had no idea.
I hope all is going well there and that you are looking forwards to a good Christmas and a lot of fun in the new year.
Jen x
Just popping in to post a few photos to wish you all a Merry Christmas when it comes.
I got follow-on funding from my grant to buy a new computer and the photography has got radically easier now that I can stack images in 10 seconds rather than 90 minutes. Yay!
Here is the obligatory tiny fern:
and this is a hair inside the trap on a venus fly trap:
This is a zoom in on the hinge that triggers closing of the trap after it is bent three times. You can also see the glands in the trap that secrete the digestive enzymes. My undergraduate supervisor Emeritus Professor Malcolm B. Wilkins told me that that's what they are. I had no idea.
I hope all is going well there and that you are looking forwards to a good Christmas and a lot of fun in the new year.
Jen x
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Very true.Lou Jost wrote:Nice, but some of those single leaf stacks should have been deeper. The trichome spikes closest to the camera are not in focus, but could have been if you had started the stack higher up. When you are determining the limits of the stack, it is very easy to miss those kinds of details. It helps to look the output on a larger monitor.
Since I connected a large computer monitor to my camera instead of using the flip up screen or a tablet, I've had FAR fewer out of focus errors.
I'm sixty two today and my eyesight isn't getting better than it was when I was twenty one.