
You might have read in the last post that I have bought a new camera. I had a couple of quick photos I took with it that I added to that post but I always like to put a camera through its paces and see what it can do before I start using it for day-to-day blogging, and that’s what this post is about. I was happy to see what it can do with window frost in microscope mode. This is one of the best shots of frost I’ve ever taken. I love seeing things like this that are right there in plain sight but are rarely seen. How something so flat can look so 3 dimensional I don’t know, but it was beautiful.

These frost crystals were on the mirror of a truck. I’ve never seen them grow curved like this. The detail was so fine It was as if they had been etched into the glass.

To think that something so beautiful could live on the mirror of a truck. It’s a good example of why I always try to be aware of my surroundings and look closely at whatever is near. You never know what you might see. Life life has put beauty in our path at every turn but if we don’t see it, we have only ourselves to blame. Because this was a mirror you can see the reflection of the camera lens behind the crystals in some of these shots. It’s a bit distracting but there wasn’t any way to hide or camouflage it.

Here was another curvy frost crystal on a mirror. They’re very beautiful but also delicate; one warm breath or a ray of sunlight and you’ve lost your subject.

This shot is of sunlight coming through a frozen jelly fungus, which is always a hard shot. I should have tried for better depth of field. If you ask it to, this camera will use photo stacking to improve depth of field, and I’ve heard that it is amazing. I’m going to have to try it.

This small icicle was full of bubbles and it was also smaller in diameter than a pencil. This camera really excels at macro photography and since that’s what I bought it for, that was what I was most interested in.

This is the midrib of a feather.

Here was the seedhead of a purple coneflower. Birds, I’d guess finches, had been eating the seeds and revealed the beautiful spirals hidden inside.

I saw a cocoon of some sort on an old door where I work. It was cottony and full of holes, and as big around as my finger and maybe an inch and a half long. I saw what looked like tiny flies on it. If you know what insect made it, I’d like to know.

Whatever they were they were too small to get a good shot of, even in microscope mode. I don’t know if they came from this cocoon or were just stuck in its wooliness. In any event they were no longer alive.

I’ve been trying to get this shot looking down a beech leaf off and on since last fall and the new camera pulled it off with ease, though the depth of field could have been better.

The last Olympus camera I had, the Stylus TG-870, wasn’t worth much when it came to landscapes, at least in my opinion, so I wanted to test its zoom capabilities. This oak leaf frozen in the ice was shot at full zoom in auto mode. I thought the camera did a fair job of it.

This shot of dry rot on a standing dead tree was shot in microscope mode from about 4 inches away. I was surprised because I thought you had to be closer to the subject to use microscope mode. This camera hs two macro modes and three microscope modes and you can get as close as 1 cm. The missing piece of wood was about as big as an average postage stamp and for microscope mode that’s huge, so I probably didn’t need to use it.

I found a tree full of lichens. This is where I would need microscope mode again.

My first choice was a beautiful star rosette lichen (Physcia stellaris.) It was maybe three quarters of an inch across. It was cold at about 20 degrees F. and this lichen was in the shade. Now that I see the photo it looks like there was frost on the apothecia.

I think this was the Eastern speckled shield lichen (Punctelia bolliana.) According to what I’ve read it grows on the bark of deciduous trees, has a bluish gray body with large brown apothecia, and has brown to black dots (pycnidia) on the surface of the body. I think this one checks all of those boxes.

I would call this color bright red but the Eastern speckled shield lichen’s description says the apothecia should be brown, and my color finding software sees rosy brown, so I can’t argue. What you see here averages about .08 to .12 inches across. I don’t think I’ve ever been able to get this close to a lichen and I don’t know of a DSLR lens that could.

This shot of a smoky eye boulder lichen is another example of what microscope mode will do. I never knew this lichen’s apothecia sat on top of the body (thallus) in that way. I’m going to have a lot of fun using this camera but I should take a little more time and use a tripod. I also want to try stacking in microscope mode. It will stack as many as 7 shots together for amazing depth of field.

These are the bracts that the flower petals come out of on a witch hazel. They are tiny little cups that I could barely see, but the camera found them. I hope to see petals on the spring blooming witch hazels soon.

This camera’s lens is an F 2.0, which is considered a “fast” lens. That means it has good light gathering capabilities due to a larger aperture, so I tested it one recent early morning at this stream. I’ve had to lighten the photo just a bit but at full zoom in what was barely dawn, it did fairly well for a point and shoot camera that is smaller than a 3 X 5 card. All in all so far, I’m really happy with it and I think I’m going to have a lot of fun with it. The fact that it will do landscapes is a pleasant surprise. In case you missed it in the last post, the camera is an Olympus TG-6. It is a field camera that many scientists use in the field because it is so tough. It is water, dust and shock resistant, heat and cold resistant, and it takes incredible photos, either on land or under water. If you’re interested in macro photography this is a relatively inexpensive camera that will take you anywhere you’d care to go.
The camera is an instrument that teaches people how to see without a camera. ~Dorothea Lange
Thanks for stopping in.
THANK YOU so much, especially for the window frost in microscope mode, the small icicle was full of bubbles, the midrib of a feather, and the oak leaf frozen in the ice shot at full zoom in auto mode. “effective camera”
You’re welcome Krys. Yes, this camera was worth the price!
THANK YOU for the wonderful pictures of the ice crystals .. your camera will show us a lot of beauty.. so far excellent,
Thanks Krys. Yes, there will be much more to come!
The new camera images are outstanding! I do like the quote from Dorothea Lange, too.
That quote is very true.
Wow! Are we lucky you got this new camera! 😁 Unbelievable detail. Thank you! – Cindy
You’re welcome Cindy. There will be much more to come!
You and your new camera are making a great team!
Thanks Judy. We’d better, we’re going to be together for a while!
amazing
Thanks Tracy, it’s an amazing camera!
Wow, loved the apothecia macros… simply amazing. Looking forward to seeing more!
Thanks Eliza. It’s fun to have a camera that can see what this one can!
The frost pictures are stunning and beautiful and just amazing. I really like the 3D effect and the subtle purplish greenish metallic sheen. The camera is amazing. In the jelly fungus photo you can really see the sharp focus toward the front and the diminishing focus in the fungus lobes toward the back. I am intrigued by the idea of focus stacking. Maybe because my dad was a newspaper reporter and photographer when I was a kid and I learned just enough about how ISO, aperture, and shutter speed interact with focal length to be curious. This must take an enormous amount of computing power. And to think that between our eyes and our brain, all these factors are coming together constantly, no matter where we look, near or far, dark or light. Thanks for another awesome, thought provoking post.
You’re welcome. I didn’t know your dad did photography too. Every time we talk about him I end up wishing I had gotten to know him better.
Yes, this camera is amazingly heavy for such a small package, really packed with both electronics and protection.
To stack photos you need a steady camera and no wind, so if the wind stops someday I’m going to grab my tripod and try it out. If I remember what the manual said correctly you set the desired number of shots and when you press the shutter the camera takes that number, slightly adjusting the focus in each photo. Then it stitches them all together into one photo with perfect depth of field. All in seconds. So yes, it’s quite a lot of technological wizardry that I’m carrying around in my pocket. But even without all of that it takes amazing photos. As you say though, it can’t beat what our brains can do!
To be honest, he mostly took black and white pictures of car crashes and house fires as a reporter for the Sentinel, but he did set up a small dark room in our basement. I learned how to develop negatives and make prints. He bought me a Brownie camera with the viewfinder in the top and taught me the basics.
You were lucky. My daughter was very interested in black and white in school and she developed her own prints as well.
Amazing what a camera can reveal. I feel so fortunate to be able to see all these marvels through your stunning photographs.
Thank you Daphne. Yes, there are a lot of beautiful things out there that we never see. I love showing them here so people can see what we’ve been missing.
I am very impressed by your results. The lichen shots are very good. I like the idea of photo stacking so I hope that you can get it to work. I have a lot of discarded shots that would have been better with such a facility.
Thank you. I could have used it today but you should really use a tripod when you stack the photos. From what I’ve heard and read the camera should be kept very still when you use it but as all photographers know, carrying a tripod all the time isn’t easy.
I find it really tedious to have to take one with me.
Yes, it can be.
Congrats on your new camera, and especially those shots of the frost. I’ve always been impressed by your photographs so break a leg (not literally, eh?) with future pictures. Either way, they’ll be great. Wishing you a good weekend.
Thank you Cynthia. As you know, I like seeing those things that are too small to see.
I hope all is well. We’ve had some beautiful weather over the past couple of days and I hope you had a taste of it, too.
Wow. Your photos are stunning. You are inspiring me to find some frost and peer at it for awhile. 🙂
Thanks Judy! From what I’ve heard you shouldn’t have any trouble finding frost in Michigan this year. I hope you’re warming up and thawing out a bit!
Beautiful. Much looking forward to what’s to come!
Thank you Karen, me too!
Looks as if the Olympus TG-6 is your retirement partner. You two will be off on adventures to do some serious close-up work, and landscapes as well! You’ll be so enjoying yourself and we will benefit. Looking forward to the ride, Allen. And with spring on the horizon… well, who could ask for more?
P.S. – the frost pics are splendid!
As you know I’d much rather they were flowers but a nature blogger has to accept what nature gives!
Thanks Ginny, that’s one way to put it!
I agree, when it is spring I definitely enjoy myself, with or without a new camera.
There are more signs every day!
The pictures are amazing. and your enthuiasm is catching. Thanks for sharing the fun.
You’re welcome. Anyone can do it, not just me!
Great pictures.
Thank you, Mary.
The close-up shots of the ice crystals and the lichen today are so wonderful! Also the tree bark. I guess I’ll have to buy that camera!
Thank you. You won’t be sorry if you do!
The stunning frost ctystals seem like elegant little life forms, caught in a stop-motion dance. And the stained glass jelly fungus could be the east window in a forest Cathedral! So looking forward to all your new camera adventures, micro and macro. Many thanks.
Thank you Lynne. That was my first thought-the frost crystals seemed to be dancing.
And I agree with you on the jelly fungus! They have amazing color.
Hopefully this camera will show us a lot of beauty. I’m anxious to see what it can do with flowers!
Your new camera did you proud, those frost pictures are really special.
Thanks Susan. Frost crystals are always a pleasant surprise.