When using a close-up filter with high diopter rating, the DOF becomes more shallow. So when DOF is shallow, the background will be blurred. Of course, zooming in more will result in shallower DOF too, so the bkgnd will be more blurred.
Small insects: As small an aperture as possible (F8-11)
For large insects, it depends on wat type of insects. For dragonflies, still use F8. For butterflies, use F2.8. Reason being butterflies are thin in bodily structure, so they only need a shallow DOF to keep their bodies in focus.
sorry to budge in, i just got my Hoya +4 closeup, but i definitely need a slave flash for macro shots, my cam flash is too powerful for closeup. will the cheapo Achiever 206T do, or must i get a Metz?
well, in bright daylight it is just about sufficient at F8-11, ISO 100 from my limited experience. but having a gd flash never hurts, esp if the weather's abit gloomy/indoor shots.
also, my hands r pretty unstable, cant master the art of the tripod-hand skill...
Originally posted by shuy sorry to budge in, i just got my Hoya +4 closeup, but i definitely need a slave flash for macro shots, my cam flash is too powerful for closeup. will the cheapo Achiever 206T do, or must i get a Metz?
Compensate for the camera flash and use small aperture (e.g. F8)? Combined, these could throttle down the flash quite a bit. Doubt the 260T's flash sensor is accurate enough for macro work.
havent really tried it yet, but i dunno if F8 is enough. wif closeup filters, i'll be really close to the insect, n the flash will be really strong. i read another alternative is to cover the flash wif tissue paper, will try that too.
any1 wif experience with the 260T? specifically with macro shots?