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Alan Rockefeller
Mycologist



Registered: 03/10/07
Posts: 5,402
Last seen: 1 second
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Mushroom Photography Tips
#9002264 - 09/29/08 11:35 AM (7 days, 12 hours ago) |
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Mushroom Photography Tips - By Koraks
http://www.koraks.nl/index.php?menuparent=&page=9
Using your digital camera's macro mode - All you need to know to get close to your mushrooms and produce extremely sharp super magnified results
http://www.ephotozine.com/article/Using-your-digital-cameras-macro-mode
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Subbedhunter420
Psilonaut



Registered: 12/30/06
Posts: 1,316
Loc: Southern California
Last seen: 3 days, 13 hours
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VERY USEFUL! If you dont know how to use your macro/dont know if you have one on your camera, you should read this!
-------------------- My Subbalteatus Guide
http://www.shroomery.org/9608/Subbedhunter420s-Guide-to-Hunting-and-Identifying-Panaeolus-subbalteatus
You should read it.
Sometimes...
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FatBear
Stranger than fiction

Registered: 02/02/08
Posts: 4
Loc: Oregon
Last seen: 2 days, 5 hours
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Some boring, some whimsical, some experimental:
http://flickr.com/photos/fatbear/sets/72157603965289143/
--FatBear
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koraks


Registered: 06/02/03
Posts: 2,989
Loc: Northern hemisphere
Last seen: 10 hours, 10 minutes
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Re: Mushroom Photography Tips [Re: FatBear]
#9028915 - 10/04/08 02:37 PM (2 days, 9 hours ago) |
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But all of them nicely done I'm currently considering buying a compact for mushroom photography as well, as it's much easier to work close to the ground with a small camera. And image quality is pretty good with some of them, these days, especially at low ISO settings. A vital requirement would be a hot shoe connector in order to be able to use a flash unit that can be positioned separately from the camera.
-------------------- Mushroom photography tutorial
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This is the way the world ends.
Not with a bang, but a whimper.
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FatBear
Stranger than fiction

Registered: 02/02/08
Posts: 4
Loc: Oregon
Last seen: 2 days, 5 hours
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Re: Mushroom Photography Tips [Re: koraks]
#9028976 - 10/04/08 02:56 PM (2 days, 9 hours ago) |
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Thanks, koraks,
I should say that mine tend to focus on the "character" of the mushroom rather than on ID'ing them.
Most of those were done with a creaking old Olympus C2020z. I really like what I could do with that camera, but the image sizes were so small that they are really only good for online.
I used a Mamiya RZ-67 in the 1990s. That camera produced huge images. But it got too heavy for my bad feet to lug around with all its associated paraphenalia. I needed something in the middle so last year I bought an Olympus E510. I have only taken a few mushroom photos with it, but the season is upon us, so I should be getting a lot more of them soon. Olympus makes a flash for the E510 (and others) that operates wirelessly, and I've ordered one of those, too, as I am getting tired of the deer-in-the-headlights look of on-camera flash. The wireless feature should be helpful in brushy situations. I guess the new flash will require more learning. One nice thing about a simple camera like the C2020z is that there really aren't a lot of variables. No matter what equipment you use you will have to adapt to the constraints. That's half of the creativity of it. The fewer variables, the easier it is to adapt.
A hint, for mushroom photographers: light is everything. Use your flash and learn to modify it. You can fold a piece of paper so it is self-propping and put it near a mushroom in order to reflect some of the flash into unlit areas. Or you can deliberately shade certain areas from the flash. On compact cameras you can use the flash to draw the mushroom from the background by setting an under-exposure and using flash at the same time. On more controllable cameras you will have to figure out how to mix flash and background exposures so the mushroom is brighter than the background. In PhotoShop a little bit of unobtrusive vignetting can also be helpful in cases where you didn't put enough emphasis on the mushroom.
Another hint: wear your kneepads and expect to get dirty because the best photos are usually taken with your face in the dirt. Be a mushroom, be their peer and they will show themselves to you in a way that they rarely do to mere humans. :-)
--FatBear
Edited by FatBear (10/04/08 04:41 PM)
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koraks


Registered: 06/02/03
Posts: 2,989
Loc: Northern hemisphere
Last seen: 10 hours, 10 minutes
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Re: Mushroom Photography Tips [Re: FatBear]
#9029007 - 10/04/08 03:02 PM (2 days, 9 hours ago) |
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All very sound pieces of advice 
MF does have its charm, although portability is an issue. I still have a 645 lying around, gathering dust due to a focus calibration problem. Besides, I never really liked the 4:3 format. I like either 1:1 or 2:3 (or even wider). Currently, I use an EOS 20d for mushroom photography, but with grip and L-lenses attached it is quite a hassle to get really close to the ground. I do carry a Velbon tripod from which I can suspend the camera upside-down, which allows me to get really low, but I keep getting muck on my head from peering down the viewfinder. So I'd really like to get myself a nice little compact that I can poise on a GorillaPod. I think I'm going to look into Canon's PowerShot and IXUS product lines to see if there's something to my liking there.
-------------------- Mushroom photography tutorial
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This is the way the world ends.
Not with a bang, but a whimper.
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FatBear
Stranger than fiction

Registered: 02/02/08
Posts: 4
Loc: Oregon
Last seen: 2 days, 5 hours
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Re: Mushroom Photography Tips [Re: koraks]
#9029762 - 10/04/08 07:21 PM (2 days, 5 hours ago) |
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I have a Bogen (now Manfrotto) tripod with the legs that swing out really wide and that weird 3D head. Using this with the center post upside down and the head twisted around as only this one can do, I can actually set the camera at ground level and it is still upright for easier control. But tripods are such a hassle for low-level photography that I really encourage people to learn to use the flash so you don't need them.
Olympus made the first dSLRs with "live view", allowing you to frame and focus your image on the LCD then shoot. In fact, this was one of the key reasons for my selecting this camera. It's kind of clumsy, doing a lot of clicking and buzzing and taking a long time to process a shot, but it works and is very handy for really awkward angles and/or muddy places. I'm not an equipment junky, so I don't know what's out there in 2008, but I assume the other camera manufacturers are also offering some form of live view by now. So whatever modern lens system a person has I imagine they can find a camera with live view to work with it.
Edited by FatBear (10/04/08 07:22 PM)
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georgeM
Human



Registered: 07/05/05
Posts: 1,375
Loc: north eastern kansas
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Re: Mushroom Photography Tips [Re: koraks]
#9029787 - 10/04/08 07:31 PM (2 days, 5 hours ago) |
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Have you seen this?? I'm considering making it as my next camera, though I will really miss the movable LCD of other cameras in the Powershot series.
Edited by georgeM (10/04/08 07:32 PM)
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koraks


Registered: 06/02/03
Posts: 2,989
Loc: Northern hemisphere
Last seen: 10 hours, 10 minutes
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Re: Mushroom Photography Tips [Re: georgeM]
#9031183 - 10/05/08 04:09 AM (1 day, 20 hours ago) |
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@FatBear: I tried shooting with flash only, but I don't really like the results in most cases. Usually, I want to stop down to somewhere in the f/8-f/32 range and balance flash light with available light to retain the 'natural' look somewhat. With the low light levels usually associated with mushroom photography, that comes down to exposure times of up to 10 seconds, so a tripod is an absolute must for my style of mushroom photography (which is not to say that it is a categorical rule; if flash only works for you, beautiful, enjoy the flexibility!)
The live view function of the Olympus has now been mimicked by at least Canon and Nikon, perhaps also by Sony; I'm not really sure about them, but I suppose they followed suit. I've come to realize over the last three years that it is a useful function, especially in this line of work. Unfortunately, as far as I know none of the dSLRs support live view and have an adjustable display, indeed (GeorgeM, I hear ya!) like e.g. the older (?) Canon PowerShot series. Nevertheless, that G10 does look interesting. My gf today voiced her preference for an Olympus Mju 1060, but although it looks like a nifty little camera, it lacks a decent wide angle (zoom range starting at 37mm in 35mm-equiv.) It is an affordable camera though, but it definitely wouldn't work for me. The G10 is rather appealing, though. Thanks for the tip, GeorgeM!
-------------------- Mushroom photography tutorial
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This is the way the world ends.
Not with a bang, but a whimper.
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Theylikethatshit
"Cyan Guru" lmao



Registered: 09/20/06
Posts: 166
Loc: PNW
Last seen: 1 hour, 28 minutes
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Re: Mushroom Photography Tips [Re: koraks]
#9037898 - 10/06/08 03:34 PM (8 hours, 59 minutes ago) |
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My macro does not always work, sometimes if the mushroom is too small it has a hard time focusing therefore I cant take a clear shot. any help on this?
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Alan Rockefeller
Mycologist



Registered: 03/10/07
Posts: 5,402
Last seen: 1 second
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If you set the mushroom on something with a texture like some moss, you can get it to focus on that.
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