I didn't even notice the bee in flight until I looked at my shots at home. These bees are tiny about a quarter of an inch or so.
a700 Tamron 17-50@50mm f/6.3 1/1000 ISO-200
I love how the guy in flight appears to be simply floating.
Darin Wessel α 900
Zooms: Tamron SP AF70-200mm f2.8 Di LD Macro; Sigma 28-90mm D macro, Konica-Minolta 18-70 f3.5-5.6
Primes: Minolta 28mm f2.8; Sony 50mm f1.4
Minolta RC-1000 remote commander
Great image. What filter did you use. I like the POV and the star effect from the sun. Great job
Frank
Sony A77
Sony A580
Sony A 100
Maxxum 400si.
Sony 18-70 Kit Lens
Minolta AF 35-70
Minolta AF 50 f/1.7
Tamron 70-300 f/4-5.6 Di LD
Tamron 60mm Macro
Tamron 17-50 f/2.8
Tamron 2x Converter
Sony HVL-F42AM
Quantaray 70-300 4.5-5.6 Macro
Slingshot 200 Bag
The crow was being chased by this red winged blackbird. Not the best shot but I like the look of it.
Frank
Sony A77
Sony A580
Sony A 100
Maxxum 400si.
Sony 18-70 Kit Lens
Minolta AF 35-70
Minolta AF 50 f/1.7
Tamron 70-300 f/4-5.6 Di LD
Tamron 60mm Macro
Tamron 17-50 f/2.8
Tamron 2x Converter
Sony HVL-F42AM
Quantaray 70-300 4.5-5.6 Macro
Slingshot 200 Bag
I see some good images with old Minolta glass.
Nice Chipmunk, fdexclpl, sharp where it counts.
Nice Black & White, Elisha.
Elisha, you raise a good point regarding the percentage of keepers you can expect; also how digital has changed the perception of how many times you can afford to release the shutter. I'm still old school on this one; I think it better to devote some time to planning the shot and release once rather than clacking away hoping for the best. I wonder how many secondhand DSLR's come with a knackered shutter.