60mm 

37 creative works found

  • Originally submitted for the Australian Digital Photography & Design Magazine competition: ‘The Colour Green’. Tools: / Green food dye / Martini glass / Water / Canon EOS 350D DSLR / Canon 60mm Macro USM

  • Not sure what type of flying thing this is, whether it comes under bees, wasps or something else. But they sure are fast little buggers. — Canon EOS 350D DSLR / Canon 60mm Macro USM

  • A cluster of small flowers (around a blade of grass in width) I found hidden amongst the reed and grass while shooting dragonflies. For a size comparison the pink leaf-thing towards the right side is a blade of grass. / Color editing since the original pink and yellowish green didn’t go too well together.

  • Taken at around 12 AM in my yard. / The grass was due covered and I used an external flash to light up the background.

  • Pretty drops on flower petals that form halos in the middle due to my Macro Ring Lite MR-14EX.

  • A photograph of a heart shape on a stamen of a small flower. / Diascia Hybrid :)

  • f14 / 1/160 / iso400 / canon 40d / canon 60mm macro

  • canon 40d / canon 60mm macro

  • 1/40 / f4.0 / iso160 / canon 40d / 60mm macro

  • Tibouchina flower / D700, 60mm macro

  • Advice needed
    by Globalphotos

    Am about to jet off on another 6 week + stint overseas and want to purchase a new Canon macro from Duty Free. Am tossing up between a …

    Am about to jet off on another 6 week + stint overseas and want to purchase a new Canon macro from Duty Free. Am tossing up between a 60mm and a 100mm. If any of you own either one of these lenses could you please post a shot in this journal with the lens details so that I can do a comparison. / Bit of free advertising for yourself in the process !!! Any help would be more than appreciated. Thanks in advance / Hugsss / Varinia x

  • This is from the side of a burnt-out car. I think it looks like an aerial view of a mangrove swamp. Its amazing to me how much color can be found in such a piece of junk. A top flight lens helps! Nikon D90 with 60mm macro handheld 1/60s f16 ISO 800 /

  • The brilliantly colored wing-tips of an immature female variegated meadowhawk (Sympetrum corruptum). Canon Rebel XSi / Canon EF-S 60mm f/2.8 USM Macro / 1/80, f/11, -1/3, ISO 800, hand held

  • Looking over the “shoulders” of a young female variegated meadowhawk (Sympetrum corruptum). This is a 1:1 macro shot with no cropping. See largest available image size to observe more detail. The ommatidia show up nicely. Canon Rebel XSi / Canon EF-S 60mm f/2.8 USM Macro / 1/80, f/11, -1/3, ISO 640, hand held

  • A portrait of a lovely young female variegated meadowhawk (Sympetrum corruptum). The ommatidia stand out cleanly in this 1:1 macro shot (no crop). See larger version. Canon Rebel XSi / Canon EF-S 60mm f/2.8 USM Macro / 1/80, f/11, -1/3, ISO 640, hand held

  • A very close look at the eyes and leg of a young variegated meadowhawk (Sympetrum corruptum). Thousands of ommatidia combine to make the dome-like multi-faceted compound eyes. Canon Rebel XSi / Canon EF-S 60mm f/2.8 USM Macro / 1/80, f/11, -1/3, ISO 640, hand held

  • A face portrait of a young variegated meadowhawk (Sympetrum corruptum) showing off her face and eyes. What a beauty! Canon Rebel XSi / Canon EF-S 60mm f/2.8 USM Macro / 1/60, f/11, -1/3, ISO 640, hand held

  • With a little gift in hand, this black-capped chickadee (Poecile atricapillus) along with two others boldly landed on my palm to grab their favorite treat, sunflower seeds. The birds would land one-at-a-time in a quick series, and then flit off to eat the morsel. Once finished eating, they little avians would return for more. When the chickadees had consumed all the sunflower seeds, they flitted off on new business, leaving the other food behind. Much too close for the telephoto lens, capturing these birds required my EF-S 60mm f/2.8 USM Macro. This situation proved somewhat challenging photographically: I held the camera with just one hand (glad that the 60mm macro is a small lens), and held a lively bird in the other, so there was ample opportunity for things to move during the shot. Nevertheless, some frames turned out nicely. The detail captured in this image is equivalent to the EF 70-200mm f/4L USM. Canon Rebel XSi / Canon EF-S 60mm f/2.8 Macro / 1/250, f/5.6, -1/3, ISO 200, hand held

  • The Dragonfly (Order Odonata) During the summer and autumn months, dragonflies are a familiar sight along stream banks, lake shores and other waterways. Sometimes they can be found far away from water: These insects are strong fliers, and some species are known to fly across entire oceans. Odonates typically patrol a small area with much energy in search of food, which is often comprised of insects. They are one of many predators that feed on those pesky (but valuable ecologically) mosquitoes that tend to chase people into their homes during the evening. Some dragonflies are rather timid, and will fly away when approached. Others may find a person a good place to land for a nice sunbath. When one of these insect dragons is perched with their abdomen pointing toward the sun, the behavior is called obelisking, and is probably a means of keeping the insect cool by presenting the leas amount of surface area sunward. When not obleisking, many dragonflies will simply hang vertically from a perch like a giant pendant. It is typically a dazzling sight to find one of the larger specimens hanging nearly from a twig or grass stem like a piece of bejeweled treasure. With their big eyes, multiple wings and legs, often combined with strong patterns of coloration, these insects are reminiscent of little totem poles. Species list: Jan: Blue-eyed darner (Rhionaeschna multicolor) / Feb: Paddle-tailed darner (Aeshna palmata) / Mar: Eight-spotted skimmer (Libellula forensis) / Apr: Variegated meadowhawk (Sympetrum corruptum) / May: Cardinal meadowhawk (Sympetrum illotum) / Jun: Paddle-tailed darner (Aeshna palmata) / Jul: Variegated meadowhawk (Sympetrum corruptum) / Aug: Dot-tailed whiteface (Leucorrhinia intacta) / Sep: Shadow darner (Aeshna umbrosa) / Oct: Variegated meadowhawk (Sympetrum corruptum) / Nov: Canada darner (Aeshna canadensis) / Dec: Striped meadowhawk (Sympetrum pallipes) Shooting locations: Jan: A neighborhood lane, Vancouver, BC / Feb: Beacon Hill Park, Victoria, BC / Mar: Minnekhada Regional Park, BC / Apr: Reifel Bird Sanctuary, BC / May: Beacon Hill Park, Victoria, BC / Jun: Beacon Hill Park, Victoria, BC / Jul: Reifel Bird Sanctuary, BC / Aug: Minnekhada Regional Park, BC / Sep: Reifel Bird Sanctuary, BC / Oct: East Sooke Park, BC / Nov: Reifel Bird Sanctuary, BC / Dec: Beacon Hill Park, Victoria, BC

  • Araneus Diadematus Sep.09 Nikon D80 / 60mm macro / EXIF Featured in Insects, Bugs and Creepy Crawlies

  • ‘Eye’ See You – Abre Los Ojos – Self Shot Your probably thinking, how in the world did he shoot this of his own eye… Well, the answer is a Silk AMT-700 Pro tripod, 60mm Macro, Vivitar 283 external flash, and a lot of tries. Enjoy.

  • Macro image of a fly, captured using a 60mm macro lens plus 20mm tubes plus 1.4x extender to give approx 1.9x magnification. Image is a composite of several images with different points of focus (“focus stack”).

  • Taken with Canon 1000D and Macro Lens 60mm / 21 Dec 2009

  • Taken with Canon 1000D and Macro Lens 60mm / 21 Dec 2009

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