13 November 2019

“Macro” shots of red leaves





I'm still getting to know my new (but second-hand) Sony camera, the DSC-RX100 M2 — the second model in this line, the original being the RX100. I'm taking it out on walks when I can. When it's not raining, in other words.





I'm so used to Panasonic cameras that I have to work pretty hard to figure out how the Sony works, what the good settings for my photography are, and what features it has and doesn't have.


One feature it doesn't have is a "macro" mode. That the shooting mode that you use to take extremely close-up photos. Panasonics have such a mode. I was just think about why it's called "macro" mode. Macro is the opposite of micro, so I guess it means you're taking close-ups of micro-details and then displaying them in a very large, or macro, format.




Anyway, you'd never know the Sony camera doesn't have a macro mode. All you have to do to get the same effect is to open the lens all the way up — in other words, no zoom — and take the photos. That's what I did for these. The photo above shows the Viburnum bush with all the red leaves in the three macro-style photos.





Actually, not having to switch the camera into macro mode for such photos is an advantage. Why? Because you don't have to switch it back out of macro mode when you're done. It's one less complication you have to deal with when you're taking a lot of photos. Here's a zoomed out photo I also took with the Sony RX100.

10 comments:

  1. The first photo is stunning for the colors as well as for the sharpness!

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  2. I like how the last red one really shows the texture of the front leaves. Great color.

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  3. Yes, excellent, I like.:o)!

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  4. I noticed the difference right away...more intense colors and clarity! Good purchase.

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    1. The light changes from minute to minute, hour to hour, and day to day... not to mention from month to month as the sun shines differently depending on how high it is in the sky. Eternal verities, I guess. Each camera performs better in specific light conditions. I like this Sony, but I won't give up on my Panasonic cameras either.

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  5. Such interesting reds. They're showing up on my monitor as sort of pinkish, with undertones of mauve. And yet the big bush in the picture looks red, red. Good, sharp definition.

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    1. One of the difficult things about posting photos on the internet for people to see on their monitors or tablet screens is that every screen is different. I have two desktop PCs and a Windows laptop, plus two tablets (I know, crazy). No two displays look exactly alike. I agree with you about the pinkish reds and the mauve colors. The last photo really brings those characteristics out.

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  6. Wonderful, just wonderful... Lately I've been using the new camera that my husband got right before he died. He was the camera expert, so I am totally learning as I go!

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