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Photo#238039
Phidippus something er other - Phidippus regius

Phidippus something er other - Phidippus regius
Altamonte Springs, Seminole County, Florida, USA
November 4, 2008
Size: ~4-6mm
View from above :)

(Still working on how to get this camera to focus properly. With the Canoon 300D it is aqward. Five focus points when I look through the camera, yet because the subject is so small only one focul point lights up. So I really have no way to know if the area outside of that is focused or not. Still playing around with differant Raw settings to try to achieve a larger focul point???

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Phidippus something er other - Phidippus regius Phidippus something er other - Phidippus regius

Moved
Moved from Typical variations.

Moved
Moved from Regal Jumper.

...
Adjust your diopter to make sure you are able to see a sharp image through the viewfinder, switch your lens to "manual focus", practice, practice, practice...

What aperture setting did you use for this image? Looks wide open if these are 100% crops. Try setting to at least f/11.

 
Always use manual focus, auto
Always use manual focus, auto doesn't work worth a darn. Used P mode which is pretty much auto in RAW for these couple of shots.

 
Auto (focus/exposure) does
just what it's supposed to do: works just barely good enough for most people, most of the time. You, however, are a using a specialized macro lens to photograph a 4-6mm unrestrained wild animal at life-size magnification from 12 inches away. (ain't no Easy-Shooting mode for that!)

So along with focus accuracy, you must have precise control over depth-of-field, which you will have if you switch to Av mode and set the aperture size manually. If you are using flash, set the camera for Manual exposure, f/11 to f/16, and shutter speed at 1/200s.

 
Beautiful
Baby Phid. That shot was certainly not in anything above f/11. I use only manual focus and manual on the camera setting so I can push the F stop up to f/16 or higher for these tiny girls if I can get it. This will not be possible without a flash however. Or a nice tripod maneuver. These small alert spiders are some of the most difficult camera subjects even when you have them in a smaller controlled capture environment. Hard not to love 'em though.

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