Forum Moderators: wheatpenny Forum Coordinators: Anim8dtoon
Photography F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 13 3:04 pm)
Well - it's not a depth of field thing - the forground is sharp, and the tiny hairs on the far side of the bee's body are sharp - but the hairs on the close side of the body are not. I wouldn't think it would be a motion thing - don't see how a bee could move half his body and not the other half. Could this have been something like a water drop on the lens or condensation? Was this shot digital or film? (perhaps a bubble in the processing or shmutz or condensation on the raw film...?)
Dependent on exposure time, for example 1/30 sec, it could have moved its wings for, say, 10 ms and then holding those wings still. It would cause 10 ms exposure time of moving wings and 23 of wings in place. That would explain the transparency of the blur. I've seen happening it with a frog, exposure time 10 seconds, that hopped after 4 seconds to another place in the image. It appears now cloned, and a little transparent (the jump went so fast it is invisible). Jan-Carel
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