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Jul 09 2012

Portrait of a Praying Mantis

Last Friday night, I was on my way out of the garage to head to the church and caught a glimpse of a giant green bug hanging out on the side of the door.  I knew this bug, I knew it well, & I knew it was also hard to come across as they tend to be sneaky predators, like ninjas.  It was a praying mantis, ironic right, on my way to church and I spotted a praying mantis.  I ran into the house as quickly as I could, swapped out the 18-54mm with my 50mm macro and 2 x extension tube, along with my speedlight and flash cable.  I ran back outside like a boy that scarfed down his dinner to make sure he didn’t miss the last inning of the backyard kickball game.  I set myself up as quickly as possible and started snapping away!

Surprisingly this mantis held poses for a long time, carefully looking at me as I was getting uncomfortably close to him.  After I was satisfied with the shots I composed, I went back into the house dropped off my stuff and then headed off to church.  Well sort of, just after I put the camera away I ran back out to snap a couple more, this photography thing is addicting!

    

I was pleasantly surprised by the shots I took and had a blast post processing them.  I used a few ACR (Adobe Camera Raw) tricks to pull out a ton of Dynamic Range from each single exposure.  ACR coupled with Topaz Adjust 5 really set these portraits off.

I won’t go into the details of how the equipment was setup, but if you are curious you can see how I shot a similar bug last year around this time. 

Photo Tip For The Week:

Always shoot in RAW!  I will do a thorough explanation as to why on Friday where I will outline the difference between RAW and JPEG, the Pros’s and Con’s of both, and who should use either.  I shot these mantis pictures, but to my demise many of them were 2-3 stops underexposed.  I was perfectly set up for the shots but it was extremely difficult to view my exposures on the LCD outdoors.  Competing with the Mid West sun at 6 PM in the summer is tough!  Luckily I was able to recover all of them with ease and accuracy because I shot them in RAW.

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