NWPBanner
Welcome! NWPphotoforum.com
Previous Thread
Next Thread
Print Thread
Backlit image of a damselfly #17448
09/11/08 12:22 AM
09/11/08 12:22 AM
Joined: Sep 2008
Singapore
A
Anthony Offline OP
Wanderer
Anthony  Offline OP
Wanderer
A

Joined: Sep 2008
Singapore
Dear all,

I am interested in macro shooting and have been learning for a few months now. I believe a quick way to learn and improve is to shoot more, post more and get more feedback and guidance from experience photographers. So far, I have participated in two nature photography forum and benefitted from them tremendously. I am sure I would learn as much from this reputable website.

This is my 1st post and your critique & comments are most welcome.

Cheers!
Anthony.

PS - Just realised that there are a few dust spots when I previewed the image. Please ignore it and I will get it cleaned soon ;-)


Re: Backlit image of a damselfly [Re: Anthony] #17449
09/11/08 05:54 AM
09/11/08 05:54 AM
Joined: Jun 2005
TN
Julie Offline
Addict
Julie  Offline
Addict

Joined: Jun 2005
TN
The photo is a truly beautiful photo. Love how you caught the backlighting. Great detail, just really nice

The composition could use some work. It is too centered as it is. Not exactly sure how I would shot it differently, but, I probably would have shot the damselfly's head up in the up 1/3 quadrant to the left and shown a bit more of the wings, or a bit less.

It really is a beautiful photo though!

Re: Backlit image of a damselfly [Re: Julie] #17450
09/11/08 07:56 AM
09/11/08 07:56 AM
Joined: Feb 2005
Montana
Tony Bynum Offline
Pooh-Bah
Tony Bynum  Offline
Pooh-Bah

Joined: Feb 2005
Montana
I agree with julie, and I would add that it needs more contrast and color in the bug. I think one of the things that marks a good bug macro as art, is color. bugs have remarkable colors that need to be exposed otherwise they are bug shots. I know how much effort it takes to get shots like the one you posted, so I appreciate it very much! I also know that 99% of others who are not photographers dont know and mostly wont care, so it's all about the image. I'd try to increase the saturation and contrast in the thorax abdomen and eye areas the maybe drop the green in the background to help isolate the bug. . .


Who's Online Now
0 registered members (), 1,734 guests, and 4 spiders.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Newest Members
Susitna Sled Dog, David Vitor, CTiefisher, DrSuse BlueDevil, airphotog
3319 Registered Users
Forum Statistics
Forums6
Topics637
Posts1,018
Members3,319
Most Online4,044
Nov 13th, 2025

Copyright 2005 - 2020 Nature, Wildlife, and Pet Photography Forum. "NWPPhotoforum" and "nwpphotoforum.com" are the property of Nature, Wildlife, and Pet Photography Forum. All Rights Reserved. Wild Coyote Studio, New York Pet Photographer

Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 7.7.1
(Release build 20190129)
PHP: 5.6.40-1+hw4 Page Time: 0.062s Queries: 14 (0.017s) Memory: 0.8875 MB (Peak: 1.9714 MB) Data Comp: Zlib Server Time: 2025-11-24 19:35:43 UTC