Flower Crab Spider

I found a Flower Crab Spider in our garden. They are generally rather easygoing and not too difficult to photograph.  I used the Sony 90mm 2.8 and had to use a large aperture (f3.5) to get 1/400 sec which is necessary when shooting without a tripod in windy conditions and in natural light. Both your camera and the plant on which the spider move, so speed is essential. Depth of field becomes extremely narrow in these cases - I want to keep my ISO as low as possible - so I engaged burst mode and tried a lot of shots.  As I wanted the eyes in focus, I turned off autofocus and focus by moving the camera back and forth - bursting right before the eyes come in focus to just behind the eyes.  Every gust of wind moved the spider a few mm, so 95% of my shots where out of focus, many even by a smidge. Even the first picture is not 100% accurately focused, but it kind of works.  I sharpened the face a little bit to let it stand out more.  An advantage to the shallow depth-of-field is that fore-and background turn into a blur and the face of the spider becomes the center of attention. I chose a centered composition because of how the spider was positioned on the plant, with its face in the middle.  I toned the pictures with some more green resp. red to let unify the composition. 


BIG EDITIONS

As of now, I’m starting with BIG Editions.  These measure 150x100cm and are printed on alu-dibond with alumium frame on the back. They are one-offs, so they are unique!  Hanging them on the wall is easy, no hassle with frames and mattes. They really look amazing as they are completely mat, so you don’t have any glare when viewing from different angles. Printing quality is absolutely killer with very fine detail.  I print them from 240 Megapixel images - so the detail is stunning. I’m glad to welcome you to pick them up, so we can have a chat or I can send them. Two prints currently in my shop are Mystics and Livor.  Check them out! Thanks, Kim

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