One thing I noticed is that there appears to be some chromatic abberation present - check the red fringe on the right of the collembolan as opposed to the blue/green on the left. Try fiddling with the raw converter or using the panotools plugin for this purpose.
Cheers, David
Mark Cassino wrote:
I went out Friday and visited a place where like to take landscape shots. My main goal was to test stuff out - the 67 55mm f4, Classic Pan 200 (the 120 film back after a production hiatus), and the Ricoh TLR I recently got off eBay. While tramping through the woods I noticed a bunch of snow fleas, so I set up with the *ist-D and the highest magnification setup I had on hand - a Kiron 105mm f2.8 macro and roughly 85mm of extension tubes.
These little critters are amazing - the run around in the snow in freezing temps. They are not fleas, but rather springtails (when they shoot off on their tails they move in a rather flea-like manner, so their name makes sense.) They are a little bigger than real fleas, i.e. averaging 1.5 mm in length. The tubes and the macro lens at closest focusing gave me decent magnification, though this image is cropped and the springtail is a bit small within it. It would of been nice to have gotten closer, but there are limits to what you can do in the field.
http://www.markcassino.com/temp/peso/IMGP8697.jpg
I was happy to see them as I had, till now, only read about them. Interestingly, they were only around one fallen tree, though I tramped by many a log on the way back to get them with the *ist-D.
As for the main mission - the 67 55 f4 is fabulous, the reissued Classic Pan is indeed faithful to the old (exact exposure / development times as used with the older version worked great) and the Ricoh TLR is a gas.
- MCC
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Mark Cassino Photography Kalamazoo, MI www.markcassino.com - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

