Well done, Max! Improved audio, upbeat music, cut sheet demo, and illustrative photos. Wall props a nice addition - took me a while to recognize the prop over your left shoulder. Music box looks like a good macro subject itself. Hope your knee heals soon - that’s what you get from bowing to the photography spirits😁, I suppose. My guess is that part 2 is about stress patterns made visible when transparent subject is between two crossed polarizers. Have done this before, using a TV screen displaying a white background, clear plastic cutlery (like a fork or spoon), and circular polarizer on lens. Turn lens polarizer until image is darkest and than placed cutlery between lens and TV. Plastic shows rainbow of colors - stress patterns from when the plastic was made. You get the picture.😁. Cheers!
Thanks million Paul! Glad that the new mic pays off. I've had this music box for years now, meaning to take some interesting shots of it but I've never gotten around to it. Well at least it got it's photos taken at last.. 😅 I know exactly what you mean, and you're on the right track with your guess, but I don't want to spoil too much... I haven't started filming yet so I don't want to make promises, but I am optimistic that were going to take some amazing photos next week... Have a great weekend buddy! 😃
There's another technique related to this, using direct light rather than incident light: With your flash off camera and facing straight into your lens, you cross two linear polarisers so no light enters the lens, then place your translucent to transparent subject between the flash and the lens to photograph (you need to uncross the polars to focus then cross to shoot). The result is a black field with the subject showing up wherever the light passing through it was depolarised and thus able to enter the lens. The technique is called dark field photography and doesn't work with circular polarisers. A lot of photomicrographs use this technique, but works for anything translucent.
Really looking forward to trying this over the weekend, thanks
Glad to have discovered your channel
Well done, Max! Improved audio, upbeat music, cut sheet demo, and illustrative photos. Wall props a nice addition - took me a while to recognize the prop over your left shoulder. Music box looks like a good macro subject itself. Hope your knee heals soon - that’s what you get from bowing to the photography spirits😁, I suppose.
My guess is that part 2 is about stress patterns made visible when transparent subject is between two crossed polarizers. Have done this before, using a TV screen displaying a white background, clear plastic cutlery (like a fork or spoon), and circular polarizer on lens. Turn lens polarizer until image is darkest and than placed cutlery between lens and TV. Plastic shows rainbow of colors - stress patterns from when the plastic was made. You get the picture.😁. Cheers!
Thanks million Paul! Glad that the new mic pays off.
I've had this music box for years now, meaning to take some interesting shots of it but I've never gotten around to it. Well at least it got it's photos taken at last.. 😅
I know exactly what you mean, and you're on the right track with your guess, but I don't want to spoil too much... I haven't started filming yet so I don't want to make promises, but I am optimistic that were going to take some amazing photos next week... Have a great weekend buddy! 😃
There's another technique related to this, using direct light rather than incident light: With your flash off camera and facing straight into your lens, you cross two linear polarisers so no light enters the lens, then place your translucent to transparent subject between the flash and the lens to photograph (you need to uncross the polars to focus then cross to shoot). The result is a black field with the subject showing up wherever the light passing through it was depolarised and thus able to enter the lens. The technique is called dark field photography and doesn't work with circular polarisers. A lot of photomicrographs use this technique, but works for anything translucent.
What about an objective lens, i'm looking to get rid of that shine on minerals of as low as 3mm fov as there's no filters for those type of lenses
Deine Videos sind wirklich inspirierend!
Lieben Dank Karin!
Great content once again buddy, very informative. Good luck with your recovery!👍💪🏻
Many thanks Peter!
interesting technique Max, thanks for sharing!
And thank you for the kind feedback!
Sweet, I think this technique would be useful for 3D Textures..
Yea, people use this technique tocreate textures without specular reflections, you're right! Thanks :)
@@TheGiantWorldofTinyThings thought so