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Posted by mcc on Feb 14 2010 in Snow Crystal Photography, Snowflake Photography, Macro Photography
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2010 Snow Crystal Photo Roundup

I’ve been remiss in posting snow crystal photos here, so here’s a quick roundup of some of the better shots so far from this winter.

I just prepped the raw file for this one today, so it is my current favorite:

Snow Crystal Photograph

The red filter came through more as a red spatter on that photo.

The aperture blades jammed on the trusty old Pentax M50 f4 macro lens that I use for these shots, and in the thick of shooting last week I switched over to an M50 f 2.0 - a lens considered to be relatively unremarkable. As you can see by the shot above, it holds its own regarding sharpness. (I have since found the adapter ring that is needed to use a Sigma 50mm EX macro on the setup, and will be using that in the future.)

I’ve made several changes to the technique for shooting these. First off, I’ve finally ditched my old Pentax *ist-D and started using the newer Pentax K7 for these shots. The drawback is that it does not suppport TTL autoflash. It’s not a big deal to shoot with manual flash with the histogram etc.

Here’s another recent shot:

Snow Crystal Photo

I’ve been using a red and blue ‘filter’ (actually just the clear plastic covers from holidy LED bulbs) on the flash. In the photo above the two colors blended together to make a more or less purple tone. Here are a two examples of where the colors remained distinct:

Snow Crystal Photo
Snow Crystal Photo

Here’s an earlier shot where the colors melded nicely:

Snow Crystal Photograph

In this case, the snow crystal landed on its side. It was tiny, but I liked how it suggested a side view of a falling crystal - a little negative space on the top and there you go:

Snow Crystal Photograph

The snow has been uncooperative for most of this winter. It has snowed relatively little for Michigan - it all seems to be falling in the mid-Atlantic this winter. When it does fall it is often opaque and fluffy - I call it effervescent. The opaque parts look fluffy white when viewed in daylight, but come out dark when backlit:

Snow Crystal Photograph
Snow Crystal Photograph

And lastly - just a couple of garden variety snow crystals:

Snow Crystal Photograph
Snow Crystal Photograph

It it snows more I’ll try to take more photos, and if successful I’ll post them here.

This entry was posted by Mark C and filed under Snow Crystal Photography, Snowflake Photography, Macro Photography.

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