Well flat or not, it was the best i could do. I am not a professional photographer, am just a very new beginner and my understanding of a lot of aspects of it are zero or extremely limited. I try my best to get my head around it and try to bring it into practice. But most of the time i just simply can not get it done.I follow my predecessors as far as technology is concerned. But as a visual image I find them rather flat. Depth is largely lacking in the images. Mainly because they were taken from above
Every one had to start from scratch ;-)Well flat or not, it was the best i could do. I am not a professional photographer, am just a very new beginner and my understanding of a lot of aspects of it are zero or extremely limited. I try my best to get my head around it and try to bring it into practice. But most of the time i just simply can not get it done.
Thanks. Big chance i forget it again when taking next photo. I always use f/8 or f/11 with my Sony a7rii + Laowa 100 f/2.8 2x macro lens.Every one had to start from scratch ;-)
But what I meant was that if you take the photos a little more from one side, you get more depth in the image. You can vary the image depth by adjusting your aperture.
This also makes your subject stand out from the background better, making the subject stand out (even) more
I tried before but then i only get a very very tiny part of the insect in focus, sometimes just the head or an antenna and the rest is out of focus.&TMG1961; try f/3.5 - 5.2 sometimes ;-)
If you want to capture the subject sharp from front to back, f/8 and higher is fine. But ... everything becomes sharp, including your background, with the result that the two are often difficult to distinguish from each other.I tried before but then i only get a very very tiny part of the insect in focus, sometimes just the head or an antenna and the rest is out of focus.