Handout: Close-up Photography 8 MB
Transcription
Handout: Close-up Photography 8 MB
7/6/2016 What are close-up and macro photography? Close-up photography - photographic images taken close to the subject typically with magnifications of ~0.1X to 1X. Close-up and Macro Photography Macro (or micro) photography - images taken with a magnification of 1X (or full size) , i.e., the size of the object is reproduced at the same size on the camera’s sensor or film. Extreme macro photography - images taken with magnifications higher than 1X to ~15X Michael K. Miller CCOR July 12, 2016 Photomicroscopy or photomicrography - images taken with a variety of microscopes at magnifications between ~10X and >1,000,000X. Macro a prefix from the Greek for long or large Field Ion Microscopy ~5 million X each spot is an atom 1 Overview of the Different Techniques Small objects 1.5 mm, 0.06 in 90% of frame The tools that you require to photograph small objects depend on the physical size of the object and its distance to the camera. Lenses near minimum focus distance Point and shoot cameras in macro mode Macro lenses Close-up lenses Magnification is size of the image compared to the size of the subject Reversed lenses ~7.4X magnification 24 x 36 mm sensor Extension tubes and bellows Macro photography was first practiced somewhere between 1835 and 1839 by Englishman William Henry Fox Talbot (1800–1877). However, the term photo-macrograph (macro) was later proposed in 1899 by W. H. Walmsley for close-up images with less than 10 diameters magnification. The German Fritz Goro (Goreau 1901-86) is sometimes credited for inventing macrophotography, making visible the world that lies between the microscope and the naked eye. Early macro SLR lenses: 1955 Kilfitt Makro-Kilar 4 cm f/3.5 for Exakta 35mm SLRs 1959 Nikon 13.5cm f/4 Q: 1961 Nikon 5.5cm f/3.5 Micro 2 Twin (or stacked) lens configuration 1X 5X 10X 15X Practicalities Lighting at small working distances Positioning subject Resolution verses DOF 3 Focus Stacking 4 4 1 7/6/2016 Regular camera + telephoto lens near minimum focus distance Visualizing magnification 8X 4X 6 x 9 mm 2X 2X 12 x 18 mm 1X 1X Height of subject A nickel is 1/16 inch or 1.58 mm thick 0.5X 3 x 4.5 mm The minimum (or close) focus distance is the shortest distance from the sensor plane to the subject at which a lens can focus. The working distance is the distance from the front of the lens to the subject. Telephoto lenses, either handheld or on a tripod, can enable capture of images when the subject is sensitive to close approach or is moving. Wide postage stamp 24 x 36 mm FF Sensor Once you know the size of your subject then you can choose the optimum equipment to record its image. Nikon Lenses 2:1 = 2X – twice size on sensor 1:1 = 1X – same size on sensor 1:2 = 0.5X – half size on sensor 5 1 inch = 25.4 mm © Michael K. Miller Nikon D800 with 80-400 mm lens @ 400 mm, f/8, 1/1000s, 800 ISO handheld in boat W.D. inch Mag. 70-200 f/4 30.5 0.27X 70-200 f/2.8 45.3 0.25X 300 PF f/4E 47.6 0.24X 80-400 f/4.5-6.3 59.0 0.20X 200-500 f/5.6E 79.7 0.22X Olympus 300 f/4 (MFT) 45.3 0.48X, 0.67X with 1.4X TC On Full Frame body US quarter is 0.955 inches or 24.26 mm in diameter Dime is 0.705 inches or 17.91 mm in diameter 8X 4X Hand held © Michael K. Miller Nikon D7000 + 70-200mm lens @ 180mm, f/5.6 Extension tubes can be used to reduce the minimum focus distance (useful for long lenses) 6 © Michael K. Miller 7 Nikon D810 with 300 mm lens @ f/8, 1/200s, 400 ISO, handheld 8 2 7/6/2016 Point and shoot camera in “Macro” mode Pre-Columbian Gold Museum in San José, Costa Rica 40 mm Most P&S cameras have a “so-called” macro mode to enable photographing small objects. Canon G7X in Macro mode Most P&S cameras have a “so-called” macro mode to enable photographing small objects. Cropped & hand held ~40 mm high on sensor at minimum focus distance in Canon G7X 1” sensor size is 8.8 x 13.2 mm © Michael K. Miller Therefore, maximum magnification of the G7X is 8.8/40 = 0.22X Working distance at this magnification is only ~1.5 inches. Canon PowerShot S100 in Macro mode, handheld focal length 24 mm (35mm equiv), f/2, 1/30 s, 160 ISO, no flash 9 10 $500 Red-eyed Tree Frog, Costa Rica Macro lens Macro lenses have their optical formula optimized for close-up photography with magnifications up to 1X (1:1). Macro lenses are designed with a flat focus field (rather than the normal curved field) to provide a uniformly sharp image across the entire frame. The magnification increases as the focus distance decreases to the minimum focus distance. Magnification Focus distance © Michael K. Miller Canon Powershot G7X in Macro mode - handheld focal length 35 mm (35 mm equiv.), f/3.2, 1/40 s, 125 ISO, no flash 11 Olympus M.ZUIKO DIGITAL 60mm f/2.8 ED Macro Effective focal length = 120 mm increased due to 2X crop factor 13 mm 1X Sensor size 13 x 17.3 mm 12 3 7/6/2016 $250 - 40mm $1800 - 200 mm Macro lenses Macro lenses All true macro lenses can achieve a 1X magnification on the sensor irrespective of the focal length of the lens. Macro lenses are available in focal lengths from ~15 mm to ~200 mm. The longer focal lengths have a longer working distance but are heavier and more expensive LIVE subjects The maximum magnification, 1X, is at the minimum focus distance. Use by setting focus at 1:1 distance and move camera along the optic axis to achieve focus Some macro lenses suffer from shortening of the focal length near the close focusing distance, i.e., the magnification changes dramatically in the range (0.5X to 1X) 1:2 to 1:1, For example, Nikon AF micro-Nikkor 200 mm is ~102 mm at 1X Canon EF 100 mm is ~93 mm at infinity and ~64 mm at 1X more lighting options + less shadows less intrusive on live creatures This change in magnification can make framing difficult. They can also be used for regular photography and will focus to infinity. Effective f-number increases with magnification, m: Neff = N(1+m) Use tethered Live View or a right-angle finder if necessary Useful for copying slides and as a portrait lens 1X Macro lenses typically include the reproduction ratio 1:2, 1:1 etc. above the distance scale. Olympus OM-D E1, 60 mm macro @ f/7.1, 1/500s, ISO 200, handheld 13 14 Nikon 200 mm f/4 macro lens Canon 65 mm 1-5X Macro Lens http://www.pierretoscani.com/echo_focal_length.html can achieve magnifications similar to extension tubes/bellows $1500 MP-E f/2.8 Manual focus lens extends with higher magnifications (not an IF lens) Closest Focusing Distance 240 mm, 9.6 inches (from film plane to subject) The Nikon 200 mm f/4 macro lens changes focal length dramatically near the minimum focus distance. 15 1X 2X 3X 4X 5X Working distances mm inch 101 4.0 63 2.5 51 2.0 44 1.8 41 1.6 16 4 7/6/2016 Other methods Lensbaby and cellphones ~$400 ~$70 The Composer Pro Macro Pack includes the Composer Pro with Sweet 50 Optic, Soft Focus Optic, Macro Converters The Macro Converters sit in between the optic and lens body and allow for focus between 5" and 8.13" away from your subject. Macro lens sets to clip onto various cellphones. Very close focus distance. BLIMPS microlenses: kickstarter.com/projects/blips/ blips/description © Michael K. Miller 17 Nikon D800 + 200 mm f/4 Macro mode; 100 ISO, 3 sec 1X f/20 used due to the depth-of-field required Sensor size 24 x 36 mm (FF) 18 Close-up (or supplementary) lens Equivalent to adding reading glasses ~$15 - 75 for set of 3 or 4 Can be stacked (add together the diopters) Attaches to filter thread on lens wikimedia.org Close-up filters come in different powers from +1 to +10 diopters diopter power = 1000 /focal length of the lens (in mm) Therefore: +1 = 1000 mm, +2 = 500 mm, +4 = 250 mm, +10 = 100 mm = Magnification increases with longer focal lens lenses and/or higher diopter close-up lenses. For a 50 mm lens and +4 diopter lens gives a magnification of 0.2X For a 300 mm lens and +10 diopter lens gives a magnification of 3X © Michael K. Miller D800 + 200 mm f/4 Macro @ f/8, 1/250 s, 81 frames, 400 ISO 1X 19 The stated focal length of lenses are approximate and can have an error up to ~±5%. 20 5 7/6/2016 Achromatic Close-up lenses $75-$90 250D +4 diopters Focal length 250 mm Suitable for 30-135mm lenses $75-$150 An achromatic lens is able to emit, transmit, or receive light without separating it into colors 500D +2 diopters Focal length 500 mm Suitable for 70-300mm lenses Working distance Canon 250D and 500D close-up lenses have 2 achromatic elements to correct chromatic aberrations. For a 300 mm lens with the 500D at ∞ focus at closest focus 20.25” 515 mm 13 3/8” 340 mm 0.57X 0.86X Effective focal length of 300 mm lens = 230 mm © Michael K. Miller Higher magnifications are possible if the camera lens is focused closer than its ∞ setting 0.8X D800+200 mm f/4+Canon 500D @ f/8, 72 frame stack, 1/250s, 100 ISO 21 22 Achromatic Close-up lenses Raynox DCR-250 and DCR-150 have 2 groups and 3 elements Adapter to fit on 52-67 mm lens filter ring 35 mm 49 mm thread Coated high-index optical glass raynox.co.jp 43 mm plastic thread 8 mm 3X @ MFD 200 mm* macro lens + DCR-250 24x36mm sensor 3X = 8x12 mm Lens Diopter N mm fnumber w 200 mm lens WD $49 DCR-150 +4.8 208 ≈6 145-208 mm $58 DCR-250 +8 125 ≈3.5 99-125 mm Can be stacked for higher magnifications © Michael K. Miller *Lenses change focal length near macro magnifications/distance For example, Nikon AF micro-Nikkor 200 mm is ~102 mm at 1X Canon EF 100 mm is 93 mm at infinity and 64 mm at 1X 23 1.6X Nikon D800+105 mm f/2.8 @ 1:1+Raynox DCR250 @ f/32, 13s, 100 ISO24 6 7/6/2016 Extension tubes Microscope lens/ infinity objectives 1 or more fit between the camera body and the lens ~$120 for a set of 3 auto tubes Nikon CFI Plan 10x/0.25NA - 10.5mm WD Objective for extreme macro focus stacking 5 to 10 X Tube lens wikimedia.org Requires a 52 mm Nikon CFI Plan adapter plus a step-up ring to fit onto the filter thread size of the tube, i.e., a non-macro telephoto lens. Best with prime lenses, but zooms at long end can also work No optical components Can be used individually or in sets Extension mm 50 mm lens none 0.15X 0 450 12 0.24X 0.31 137 20 0.40X 0.49 107 Shorter focal length lenses and/or longer extensions give higher magnification 36 0.72X 0.78 75 12+20 0.64X 0.71 81 There is a significant loss of light. 12+36 0.96X 0.97 61 Also reduces working distance and range of focus 20+36 1.12X 1.08 54 12+20+36 1.36X 1.24 46 auto tubes with electrical contacts recommended Magnificat Working Distance only 10.5 mm Tube lens must be focused at infinity with aperture wide open Distance between the lens and the objective matters 100 mm tube lens = 5X, 200 mm lens = 10 X, 300 mm lens = 15 X Infinity objectives form a virtual image at infinity; the tube lens takes these parallel rays and focuses them as a real image on the sensor. Specific to a camera mount = !! " # ! New CFD ≅ f(cfd*f + cfd*ext – ext*f)/(cfd*ext – ext*f + f*f) 25 1:1 Macro 50 mm lens + 50 mm extension Bellows G7 fits between the body and the lens sensor Stops lost CFD mm 100 mm lens are half these values 26 7.2 X 5.3 mm $825 for Canon $1001 for Nikon novoflex.com Novoflex Auto Bellows for Canon EOS Bellows are flexible and continuously adjustable extension tubes (from 40 (0.8X) - 192 mm (3.8X)) that allow precise extensions and magnifications to be set. Bellows can also include a tilt-shift mechanism. Often used together with extension tubes and reversed lenses for even higher magnifications. FotodioX Macro Bellows for Nikon F or Canon EOS: $50 Extensions from 40 - 150 mm (0.8X to 3X with 50 mm lens) 27 WD 37 mm Mag 1.4X Nikon D800 + 50 mm f/1.4 + 68 mm extension @ f/16, 2s, 100 ISO 28 7 7/6/2016 Reversed lens Aperture control for auto focus reversed lens Reverse ring adapter fits between body and reversed lens Focus at ∞ Lens bayonet Aperture Control Filter attaches to and protects the rear of the lens and can reduce glare in lens like a lens hood An inexpensive ~$12 reverse ring adapter allows a lens to be mounted on a camera in the reversed position. Not to scale Bayonet specific to camera mount ~$25 Lens filter thread Aperture ring Reverse ring adapter Manual lenses of any make preferably with an aperture ring can be used. Camera is operated in manual (M) mode Adds a filter tread Male thread Bayonet specific to camera mount Filter thread specific to lens 29 Auto focus lenses require the aperture to controlled manually as it is no longer controlled by the camera 30 Reversed lens -Magnification Reversed lens -Magnification Magnification cannot be calculated for compound (thick) lenses 16-35 mm at infinity focus 22 mm ~1.1X 16 mm 4.6X 20 mm 4X 24 mm 3.3X 28mm 2.9X 35 mm 2X 13 mm ~1.8X primes WD @ CFD 23 to 30mm 50 mm f/1.2 lens at f/4 W.D. 86 mm, 3.4 inch 50 mm 1X, 85 mm 0.36X 28 mm f/2.8 lens at f/4 W.D. 53 mm, 2.1 inch Wide angle lenses give the highest magnification Wide angle lenses give the highest magnification Inexpensive but often get soft edges at higher magnifications 31 Exact magnification depends on optical formula of each lens and lens focus distance 32 8 7/6/2016 Stacking Lenses/Macro Coupler 14 mm 0.55 inch dia. primary lens reversed lens ~$10 wikimedia.org Couplers often have the same size male threads on both sides. Use step-up or step-down rings to match to lenses. coupler Use Aperture Control Filter for AF lenses This configuration consists of a primary longer focal length lens, a macro coupler, and a reversed shorter focal length lens. The coupler screws into the filter rings on both lenses. = Nikon D800 + reversed 28 mm f/2.8 @ f/16, 1/20s, 100 ISO $ % Examples: 50mm + reversed 50 mm = 1X; 300 mm + reversed 20 mm = ~15X 2X 33 34 Stacking Lenses/Macro Coupler 1.6 mm 0.063 in 15X Vignetting at the corners of the frame can occur with stacked lenses due to the aperture of the reversed lens. To minimize this effect, set the focus of the primary lens to its closest focusing distance. Sensor size 24 x 36 mm Nikon D800 with AF-S 300 mm f/4 + reversed AF-S 20 mm Working distance ~1.3 inch (33 mm) Lighting: tactical flashlight focused on ruler © Michael K. Miller 35 Nikon D800 300 mm + reversed 50 mm f/1.4 @ f/8, 1/20s, 100 ISO 6X36 9 7/6/2016 Reduction of working range Methods to get 1:1 (1X) magnification subject 1. Macro lens at close focus distance 2. Lens + extension tubes of the same extent as the focal length of the lens, e.g., 50 mm lens with 50 mm extension 3. Stacked lenses of the same focal length, e.g., a 50 mm primary with a 50 mm reversed lens. 4. Reversed 50 mm lens 5. Lens with close-up lens of the same focal lengths, e.g., a 200 mm lens and a +5 diopter (200 mm) close-up lens Min. focus distance Close-up lens subject Max. focus distance Min. focus distance Min. focus distance subject Max. focus distance Extension tubes working distance infinity When additional optical elements are inserted before or after the primary lens, the camera has a much reduced range of focus and can no longer focus at infinity. In some configurations, the working distance can be less than 10 mm 37 Light sources: flash Lighting the subject As the working distance in macro can be very small, the lens blocks much of the ambient light and also the oncamera flash that would normally reach the subject. Longer focal length macro lenses give more working distance. working distance 200 mm working distance +windshield This limits the creativity for artistic lighting the subject. 60 mm Back lighting lightpads with diffusers 1-1500 lux 6000K 540 lux 38 39 On-camera flash are blocked by the lens. Speedlights have a controllable range that is much longer (~0.6-20 m/2-66 ft) than the typical macro working distance + too much power. Nikon R1 macro flash Reduce power by using manual flash Up to 4 speedlights that can be settings. positioned around the ring A ring light goes directly around the lens and Nikon SB 200 is aligned with the axis of your lens resulting in nearly shadowless lighting but may show rings in the eyes of insects and be dimmer in the centre of the image. Two (or more) separate flash heads on either side of the lens giving a more 3D lighting effect. The SW-11 modifiers can Can be used to freeze the subject. redirect and diffuse the light ~250 flashes per charge 40 10 7/6/2016 Light sources: LED Tactical flashlight 130 - ~4000 lux Very bright Lume Cube 1 to 1500 lumen DO NOT TRY THIS AT HOME SEVERE EYE AND/OR SENSOR DAMAGE POSSIBLE Light guides with colour filters Relatively inexpensive LED Panels and high intensity LED (tactical) flashlights with continuous light output up to 4000 lux are available. Some have adjustable color temperatures ~(3000-6000K) and intensity. Some LEDs have a blue tint – adjust White Balance accordingly. WARNING: DO NOT VIEW LED OR SHINE IN PEOPLE OR ANIMALS EYES © Michael K. Miller 41 8X D800 + 200 mm + reversed 16-35 mm @ 35 mm, f/8, 1/20s, 100 ISO 42 Positioning subject in relation to camera Fleabane “The small yellow disk flowers bloom from the outside in. The white "petals" are ray flowers.” Kris Light 0.6X © Michael K. Miller Nikon D800 + 200 mm f/4 + Canon 500D @ f/8 stack, 1/250s, 100 ISO Single Lume Cube LED light – Auto WB 43 At macro magnifications, vibration and accurate positioning are major concerns. Therefore, sturdy tripods, ball heads, and good camera technique is essential. The MUP (mirror lock up) setting and a remote cable release are often used. A stable mount for the subject is also required. Moving subjects can be frustrating. $650 for pair reallyrightstuff.com Note scales for focus stacking Focus is normally achieved by moving the camera with respect to the subject. Lab jacks and/or macro 2- or 3-axes focusing rails are often used for positioning the specimen and focusing. 44 11 7/6/2016 Resolution v. Depth of Field v. Light Increasing DOF with Focus Stacking Higher bars better Focus stacking (or blending/Depth of Field (DOF) stacking) enables the DOF of an image to be increased by combining multiple images taken at slightly different focus settings or subject-to-camera distances. Allows non-planar and subjects not parallel to sensor to be photographed. Olympus M.ZUIKO 60mm f/2.8 ED Macro DLA = 6.78*1.61 = 10.9 Corrected for sensor crop factor DLA Diffraction limited aperture – sensor pitch in microns X 1.61 smaller The choice of the aperture setting is a compromise between resolution/diffraction effects, depth-of-field (DOF) and amount of light required. Macro lenses are similar to other lenses in that the resolution typically increases until the refraction limited is reached at small apertures. The DOF increases at smaller apertures and is distance dependent. Light increases with larger apertures and longer exposures The DOF is extremely small at macro working distances Simplest to place specimen parallel to sensor plane (parallelize the subject) DOF defines the optimum step size for focus stacking - >20% overlap. 45 Image capture for focus stacking Example below is a ruler set at 45° to focal plane of camera 2 3 In depth how to tutorial is available on the CCOR website 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 6 7 46 Some stacking software will suggest and set the step size for the camera lens or the focusing rail between the frames 4 Step size = 2 c n (m+1)/(m x m) 5 focus stack of 72 frames at f/8 How many frames and optimum step size A series of images at different focus or distances are captured. 1 Single frame at f/8 Most often used for macro photography but can be use for other subjects, such as landscapes. c = circle of confusion n = f-number m = magnification 8 After capture, a focus stacking program is used to automatically align and choose the in-focus regions of each image to combine into the final image. The shape of the in-focus regions depends on the depth profile of the subject. The output may be a single jpg, tiff, or dng file of the stacked image. Use at least a 20% overlap. Steps can be extremely thin when very close to subject Thinner than a credit card (0.76 mm) @ 1X = 0.45 mm with a 20% overlap @10X = 0.025 mm with a 20% overlap Out-of-focus bands (known as focus banding) of can be observed in the focus stacked image when the step size is too small 47 48 12 7/6/2016 Focus Stacking methods 1. 2. Turn the lens focus ring manually by hand Automatically step the focus motor inside your lens with software, e.g., ControlMyNikon™, CamRanger™, Helicon Remote ™, digiCamcontrol, etc. 3. Move the camera (or subject) with a focus rail, or automatically with StackShot™ Macro rail package (cognisys-inc.com) DOF 4” or 100 mm Must have a compatible autofocus lens with a computer chip Simplest to tether the camera to a computer. $550-850 Very time-consuming. Subject or camera must not move Optimum with extended distances and when shooting at 1:1 magnifications, i.e., when at end of focus range (no + focus may be available) Stacking software is then required to combine the images. $115 $200 $240 See tutorial on CCOR website $89 $189 $289 See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Focus_stacking for other software Short stack – up 20 frames: Tradition stack – up to hundreds of frames Clean sensor before starting. sensor spots will appear as dark lines stuck pixels will appear as coloured lines. © Michael K. Miller 49 D800 + 200 mm Macro @ f/8, 148 frames @ 1/250s, 400 ISO 50 Parameters for the Depth Map method Setup for Stackshot™ operation “Pyramid” (Pmax) method has NO adjustable parameters Camera’s USB port “Depth map” (Dmap) method finds the source image where the sharpest pixel is located and creates a "depth map" from this information. Radius and Smoothing parameters USB port 1 USB port 2 Shutter release The Radius Parameter: Radius is the most important parameter. Start from the default value (8 HF/10 ZS) and then set it to its minimum (1) and observe the changes. Then increase the value to get rid of any noise or artifacts, particularly halos along the edges. If your image has fine details and thin lines, a low radius level (3-5) will probably yield the best results, although you will probably get more noise and a halo effect. If there is a halo, try increasing the radius to minimize halo, then stop to preserve as much detail as possible. X 110V Power AC adapter The Smoothing Parameter: Low smoothing produces a sharper image, but the transition areas may have some artifacts. High smoothing will result in a slightly blurry image without any visible transition areas. Start with the default smoothing (4 HF/5 ZS). For more detail, decrease the smoothing value; if get too much noise and too many artifacts, increase the value. USB power AC power adapter for camera eliminates the need to change batteries Minimum step size is 0.002 mm over the 100 or 200 mm travel of the rail. Connect USB cables directly from computer to camera – no USB hubs. HF = Helicon Focus; ZS Zerene Stacker (Options> Preferences> Dmap settings 51 52 13 7/6/2016 Popular focus stacking algorithms “Pyramid” (Pmax) method is very good at finding and preserving detail even in low contrast or slightly blurred areas. It gives good results in complex cases (intersecting objects, edges, deep stacks) but increases noise, contrast and glare. It can alter colors. Some lens and reconstruction artefacts “Depth map” (Dmap) method does a better job keeping the original smoothness and colors, but it's not as good at finding and preserving detail. Images must be in order. Substack slabbing for troublesome regions or to overcome large file size/computer memory issues. 53 Halos around edges of objects and in the out-of-focus background regions Coloured straight lines running perpendicularly to the edge(s) of the frame Strings of dots – sometimes replicated Dmap reconstructions can introduced noise similar to sensor spots and stuck pixels 54 14