equiprx
Luke Skywalker

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As long as we are discussing bugs under magnification, try this.Mitsy found it while cleaning a bookshelf and saved it for me. Kinda like a cat presenting a dead mouse...
The rig:
View attachment 88040
Magic Arm clamped to the column, 90mm Vivitar β±2.5 with extender.
The result:
View attachment 88041
1/10th sec. @ β±8.0, window light.


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Actually, the D7500 has an articulating screen. Just didn't have it open when taking that shot of the "rig". The 7200 is a fixed screen.Not trying to give you GAS, but it is these times where an articulating screen would be helpful. (Disclosure, my screen is fixed as well.)

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Nice, Frank. Thanks! Some impressive work. The things I do here are hardly in that class! Calling it "casual macro" photos. I did do a summer (college) as the replacement for a metallurgical lab's photomicrography photographer, highly polished steel samples for the metallurgists' reports on grain structure of various "heats" (batches) coming out of the furnaces. Interesting for a while, but boring as the summer went on. Did learn a bit about metallurgy tho. Various strengths and grain structures.As long as we are discussing bugs under magnification, try this.
His work was in an article in this months Microscopy Today.![]()

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Just went thru this thread again. Profuse apologies, Steve. No idea why I attributed to a "Frank". I beg forgiveness!As long as we are discussing bugs under magnification, try this.
His work was in an article in this months Microscopy Today.![]()
equiprx
Luke Skywalker

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Thanks for being Frank.Just went thru this thread again. Profuse apologies, Steve. No idea why I attributed to a "Frank". I beg forgiveness!

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Just don't call me Shirley....Thanks for being Frank.
...had to do it. No choice.
equiprx
Luke Skywalker

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Someones got to do it.Just don't call me Shirley....
...had to do it. No choice.
It's the law!!!

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"Well, FRANKLY my dear..."Someones got to do it.
It's the law!!!
