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Macro lens

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Macro Lenses for the Canon EOS system
First, what exactly is a "Macro" lens. To a lens maker it appears sometimes to be a lens with "macro" printed on it! I've seen "macro" applied to any lens that will close focus to a magnification of about 0.

 


Macro lens
A lens that is designed to give optimum resolution at close subject distances.
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Macro lens
Techniques Glossary Macro lens
A lens that is designed to give optimum resolution at close subject distances.

Which Macro Lens?
Often when people are interested in getting into close-up photography, they spend some time trying to figure out what the best macro lens is.

Using a macro lens to photograph leaves
Looking closely at the detail within nature has always held an endless fascination for me. Little wonder then, to find me pondering how to capture the amazingly intricate designs within leaf structures.

Macro lenses let you get very close to subjects but have very shallow depth of field. Here I focused on the eye of the newt so it was the sharpest part of the photo.

Both macro lenses render objects in close-up on a scale of 1:2. To enable such detail, these lenses include Carl Zeiss’s acclaimed “floating elements' design.

Best macro lens
Best landscape lens
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Macro Lens
Macro lenses are used for close-up or 'macro' photography. They range in focal lengths of between 50-200mm.

Macro lens
A lens that provides continuous focusing from infinity to extreme life-size 1:1 close-ups. Also used as a copy lens because of its highly corrected design and close-focusing. Macro lenses can also be used at ordinary subject distances ...

Macro Lens
A lens that provides continuous focusing from infinity to extreme close-ups, often to a reproduction ratio of 1:2 (half life-size) or 1:1 (life-size). Nikon's version for their "macro" is "micro", e.g. 105mm F2.8 Micro-Nikkor.

MACRO LENS - A lens with the ability to focus from infinity to extremely closely, allowing it to capture images of tiny objects in frame-filling, larger-than-life sizes.

Macro Lens - lens used for extreme close-ups
Macro Photography - taking pictures of very small objects with a ratio of 1x or greater
Overexposure - when too much light gets on the sensor washing out the image ...

Macro Lenses
Tamron SP 180mm f/3.5 Di LD (IF) 1:1 Macro Lens for Nikon ($675) Reader Comments
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Macro Lens Attachments - some compact cameras actually have accessories available to help with macro/close up photography. These will enable you to enlarge your subject and/or decrease your minimum focal length.

Macro lens: A primary lens that can be focused from a very short distance out to infinity. May be a fixed focal length lens or a zoom. However most high magnification Macro lenses (lifesize or higher) are fixed.

Macro lens. A lens specifically designed for close-up photography and capable of good optical performance when used very close to a subject.
Macro photography. Production of images on film that are life-size or larger.

Macro lens - A lens especially made for extreme close-up photography that lets you focus on a subject a few inches or less from the lens surface.

Macro lenses
These allow the camera to get in closer to the subject: a non-macro lens' closest focus will normally be around 50-70cm, a macro lens will often come in to 25cm or less.
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Macro lens. Lens intended for close-up photography, able to focus well forward from its infinity position for subjects a few inches away, gives highest quality image at such distances.
Macrophotography. Photography at very close subject range.

A macro lens
A macro lens is used to shoot very small objects, such as flowers, insects, etc. Just like regular lenses, the macro lens has a range of focal lengths, but it provides especially high quality focusing on small objects.

The Macro Lens
A macro lens is used to take extreme close ups of objects. Its short focal length allows the photographer to take pictures at close distances without distortions.

Only macro lenses will work
Only macro lenses will work with this housing, not wide-angle - unless you get the Ikelite dome port which will give you a larger angle of view, but not as much as a wide-angle lens.

-Use a macro lens.
Use a macro lens to capture unique details of the leaf. If you're using a point-and-shoot camera, activate the macro mode. On the macro mode of a point-and-shoot, the optimal focal length is at its shortest.

[edit] Macro lenses
Main article: Macro photography
Macro lenses are designed for extreme closeup work. Such lenses are popular for nature shooting such as small flowers, as well as for many technical applications.

Macro lens:
A lens specially designed to give accurate resolution of a very close subject without the need for supplementary attachments.
Macrophotography: ...

Macro Lens (not essential, but will produce the best results)
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Pipette (to drop water into pool)
Light Source (lamp/window/flash)
Food Colouring (just in case you want to spice things up a bit!) ...

Macro lenses are used for close-up photography, although they can also be used for any other types of photography such as landscape and portrait. Macro lenses focus very close on their own without the need for any other attachments.

Macro lenses
This is the best way to get into macro photography and the only draw back generally is cost. You're looking at between $700 - $1500 for a new one, although you can pick up second-hand manual focus from around $200.

Macro lenses on land cameras in housings are slightly different in that they can focus continuously from infinity down to 1: 2 (an area four times the size of the film frame).

Macro lenses can be especially useful when photographing small details, but you can also rely on inexpensive extension tubes or front-mounting close-up filters.

Macro lenses are lens heads for SLR's supplementary bellows, or belong to the macro subclasses of wide-angle lenses, normal lenses, mainly zoom lenses, and even tele lenses (telemacros).

A macro lens is designed to capture a tiny subject at full size in one shot. Even when photographing a tiny dragonfly, it allows users to get close enough and magnify the subject enough to fill the frame with the object.

Most macro lenses will focus to 1:1. This means that a bee that is 1/2 inch long in life will take up a 1/2 inch of area on your actual slide or negative. You can get a little higher magnification from your macro lenses using a couple of methods.

True macro lenses are generally of much higher optical quality than ordinary lenses and usually cost more. They are also usually optimized to take photographs of small flat objects with even focus across the surface - flat field.

A true macro lens or a set of extension tubes is required to get close enough for this type of work. I like to use an 11x14 sheet of glass that came out of a picture frame.

A fourth macro lens is the Canon 65mm (Canon MP-E 65mm). This lens offers magnifications of 1x to 5x with a full-frame camera. If you're looking for high magnification, this lens has no equal.

Figure 4: Macro Lens
While close-up lenses, extension tubes, and teleconverters get the job done, the gold standard for close-up work is the macro lens (see Figure 4).

VCL-M3367 Macro Lens VF-67MP Multi-coated Protector Filter
VF-67CP Polarizing Filter VF-67ND Neutral Density Filter
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I have two macro lenses -- a 60mm and a 100mm. I prefer the 60, because I have to move really quickly when the animals are moving, and I can adjust it much more quickly. The 100mm is heavier and more cumbersome.

A macro lens's focus is closer to the subject and is used for close-up photography.
Fisheye. A fisheye lens uses an angle of view up to 180 degrees. The angle distorts the photograph so the four sides appear to be farther away.
Teleconverter.

Macro - Macro lenses are lenses where the optics allow for high magnification of subjects. "True" macro lenses record the image at the same size as it appears in real life. This is a 1:1 macro. Not all macro lenses are actually "true" macros.

Macro Lenses A macro lens is used for closeup photography and is a valuable lens for any imaging facility to have. These lenses come in various focal lengths and are capable of producing up to one half or even life-size 1:1 images.

This series of images of the same shrimp, each with the lens racked out all the way to minimum focus, illustrates the difference in magnification between a 100mm macro lens at 1:1 and two different wet diopters added to the front port: 1:1 with Canon ...

The answer is - You need a macro lens or a camera with a macro setting. Macro mode is for photographing objects at close proximity to the lens. Most point-and-shoot digital cameras have a macro mode that may be adequate for basic close-up photos.

For flower photography you need either a macro lens or a zoom lens to get the best shots. If your camera has a macro setting or you have a lens with macro capability - use it.

With a decent camera and zoom or macro lens, things you wouldn't normally pay too much attention to becomes a complete world in themselves, making them a magnificent source of inspiration for artists and designers all over the world.

The best lenses for this work are macro lenses; they are designed to shoot a flat field. I use an older Nikon 55mm f3.5 macro lens.

Macro lenses aren't good at capturing close-up shots from far away, like a telephoto lens, but are instead designed for the photographer to be close to the subject.

There are several ways to shoot close-ups with your DSLR: with the close-up setting on your camera, a macro lens, extension tubes or bellows, or a close-up 'lens' that attaches to the front of your lens like a filter.

You can experiment with macro photography by using a special macro lens for your DSLR camera. Being able to limit the depth of field is important when experimenting with macro photography in order to keep your subject sharply in focus.

I recently spalshed out on a new Tamron 90mm macro lens which cost an arm and a leg but the quality is quite stunning.

Reversal rings are probably the least expensive way for you to create a pseudo macro lens. If you aren't a dedicated macro shooter, there is no reason to put out the funds for a dedicated macro lens.

I hope this article has inspired you to build a macro lens of your own. It is a tremendous amount of fun, and in the process you are likely to learn a lot about photography and optics: Which, in turn, will improve your overall photography performance.

A true macro lens has an MM or 1:1 ,or 1x. This means that, if an object is 36mm long (the approximate width of a full-frame sensor) the lens can focus close enough to record it as 36mm on the sensor meaning that it would take up the whole width of ...

A 28mm for wide landscapes, a 55mm Micro Nikkor that serves as both a normal lens plus has the added benefit of being an excellent macro lens perfect for close-up work. A 70-210mm zoom lens rounds out my lens collection.

A wide aperture lens for those wishing to get into event photography, a stabilized zoom lens for those into wildlife and a macro lens for those into flowers, etc. With each lens get the appropriate filters.

Get to grips with using a macro lens properly with this handy guide
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Lens that allows close photography; also called a macro lens.
CMYK:
Short for cyan, magenta, yellow, and black; color model that defines the amount of color by percentage.

Micro Lens For most purposes, a micro lens is another term for a macro lens. Both terms indicate extreme close-up capability; macro and micro lenses produce half life-size (1:2 reproduction ratio) to life-size (1:1 reproduction ratio) images.

See also: Macro, Camera, Lens, Photograph, Photography