Hey, that last shot was in Cicily Alaska!
Sober enough to know what I'm doing, drunk enough to really enjoy doing it
nice photo B, it kinda reminds me of Benicio del Toro
wikipedia wrote:
...in a comedic and often poetic way, [of] the cultural clash between a transplanted New York doctor and the townspeople of fictional Cicely, Alaska"[1]
Production
Although the town of Cicely is widely thought to be patterned after the real town of Talkeetna, Alaska,[8][9] the main street of Cicely and the filming location was actually that of Roslyn, Washington.
Saw that on flickr, and thought it was
Last edited by burnzz (2010-09-25 18:30:52)
I do that to keep my photostream neat and tidy, I dont like to flood it. If you want to see a higher res version of any of them I can give out "guest pass" links. I would like to find a way to make the larger sizes available while still hiding them from the photostream, but I havent found a way to do that yetburnzz wrote:
the series is marked "private" when you click on them individually . . .
Flash kills all movement for macros this close, since essentially no ambient light is hitting the sensor. The flash duration is something like 1/20,000th of a second so theres no way to blur it. This one was actually dead (only my second dead subject, the other was the carpenter ant) so... yeah. Normally you just have to be very very patient; the jumping spider portrait took my somewhere around 3 hours to getebug9 wrote:
How do you get these insects to stay still for you and how the flippin heck do you keep a stack of lenses that's about 3 feet long from shaking :p
with a tripod, durrebug9 wrote:
How do you get these insects to stay still for you and how the flippin heck do you keep a stack of lenses that's about 3 feet long from shaking
Its freehand, tripods are impossible to focus on anyway.Trotskygrad wrote:
with a tripod, durrebug9 wrote:
How do you get these insects to stay still for you and how the flippin heck do you keep a stack of lenses that's about 3 feet long from shaking
and those flashes that are that bright that they can fully illuminate a subject for a duration of 1/20000 sec are epic.