I had long planned to set up a hide in the garden to photograph birds at our feeder but couldn't afford the prices of professional hides, so here we introduce you to the budget hide - a pop-up toilet tent (£18) with some old camouflage netting to cover the lens window. The birds are amazingly tolerant of its presence - even the very wary young Jackdaws.
Friday, June 19, 2020
Thursday, June 18, 2020
Introducing the Hosebaby for Clean Images
Those following my blog will know that I have been building a variety of experimental lenses and set-ups over our period of confinement from reversed lenses for macro, coupled lenses for ultramacro to pinholes for that softer look. Here I introduce you to a clean (and very much cheaper!) version of the Lensbaby. It feature a small length of hose from a dead vacuum cleaner and an old 50 mm plastic kit lens from Canon. The kit is shown at the end (as the hose is transparent it needs a black cloth sleeve to keep out extraneous light. The hose allows variable extension of the lens but, as it can also move sideways or up and down, you can get some interesting effects, especially with wildlife - hence the speeding snail! I don't promise but this is probably the last of the contraptions (unless another household gadgets dies!)
Wednesday, June 17, 2020
Dinosaurs and Silver-Washed Fritillaries - a Gamlingay Safari
Our first walk in Gamlingay Woods for a couple of months. We were surprised to find a baby dinosaur in residence, but delighted that there is already a good population of Silver-Washed Fritillaries emerged with the promise of many more to come. Lots of other butterfly species including a Marbled White in the meadow that I never managed to capture.
Monday, June 15, 2020
Bees and Hovers
First attempt at a slow motion nature video using my Fuji XT-3 with its great high-speed video capacity. Not quite mastered the free video editing software yet so the end point wasn't quite where I expected and not mastered the cross fades etc. - hopefully this will improve!
Wildflower Project 6
Second post of local wildflowers: Cinquefoil, Yellow Vetchling, Hogweed, Agrimony, Selfheal, Field Scabious, Bramble, Creeping Thistle, Lesser Hop Trefoil and Slender Tare.
Sunday, June 14, 2020
Wildflower Project 5
Today, I collected small parts of any new wild flowers since my last post on May 20th. I photographed them on a lightbox with overhead flash to bring out all the features of leaves and flowers. I am sharing them in two posts as quite a number since the last survey. (Scarlet Pimpernel, Black Medick, Hop Trefoil, Nipplewort, Common Poppy, White Campion, Bush Vetch, Common Mallow, Dovesfoot Cranesbill, White Clover and Red Clover
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