My new macro lens, first attempts

As some will know I invested in a new macro lens last week and it arrived yesterday, so I have been scouting around the garden, like you do, for likely suspects. The lens is a Canon RF100mm IS USM f/2.8 macro, Being used with my Canon R7. So far I am very impressed with it's capabilities. I just need to improve the guy hanging on the back of the cameras capabilities a bit ... Wink. All shots were taken hand held with no flash or anything.

Two Ants ready for a scrap

An Aphid on a flower stem

Didn't know I had so many Aphids!

Zebra Jumping Spider on top of my shed door

I believe this is a Quedius Curtipennis better known as some kind of Beetle ... Wink

And another ... Well it's the same one really ... Smile

Inside a Petunia in my garden

  • I don't do a lot of major RAW editing, but when I find it necessary, I use Adobe Camera RAW in Photoshop. I normally just go to the 'Detail' tab and select the AI Noise Reduction button', I then go to the  'Light' tab and adjust Exposure, Highlights, Whites, Blacks, Shadows and possibly Contrast. I then open 'Effects' and adjust Dehaze and Texture a bit. What I find with RAW editing is that firstly it is very time consuming - to me only worth while on very good or ones that would be good but have blown highlights or bad noise. Too much editing can create a very artistic shot, but it looks nothing like what you took. For noise in Jpgs I use Topaz Denoise, which I bought at some discounted price sometime, it is not just as good as Adobe RAW noise rduction, but it is very good. Also for editing in Photoshop, try the RAW filter under the Filters Tab, it allows you to use some of the RAW adjusting tools on jpgs. I think any kind of editing makes a photo look how you would lke it to look, not necessarilly how it originally looked. It might be worth starting an editing thread to share editing program preferences and give / receive advice on editing procedures.

  • Hi BD I am afraid you are much more advanced than I, My editing software is what came with my laptop, apart from brighter and contrast and a bit of colour that's all I do. My camera does not have video, It is 10 years old and matched up with a few secondhand lenses that serve me well. Well for me anyway, the only thing I miss is at high shutter speeds in excess of 800 I get noise so I try and lighten the Image and In some cases it gets rid of most of it. 

  • high shutter speeds in excess of 800 I get noise

    Did you mean high ISO? If so a lot of cameras will show some noise at above that level, but an editing program with a noise reduction filter sorts that out easily enough.

  • Hi BD yes ISO and my camera is not 10 years old it’s 20 years old a 2004 model I know there is light room and photo shop and other software packages but at my age I shall soldier on with what I have been using since I started photography in 2020. Sorry for my initial info being wrong senior moment Lol