Mark,
If you don't mind me asking, those photos were super sharp. If you don't mind me asking, what was the recipe that you used to take those photos?
Camera, lens, lighting, flash/no flash, f-stop, etc.
FWIW, my motivation is to leave plenty of photo breadcrumbs for anyone following behind me...and I'm never bashful to ask a fellow photographer how did they take a better than average shot?
Thanks in advance!
Cheers -
You'd be surprised at how many photos I take with a stupid little iPhone camera. A good portion of my video clips are also with that stoopid little thing! Surprising that it can focus that close!
The best clue I can give you is LIGHT! Your subject
MUST be well illuminated. Turn
off as many of the automatic features on your camera as the camera will allow- manual f/stops, shutter speeds, and sensitivity. If your camera has "live view," use it, connect some sort of HD monitor to the video output and judge your focus and exposure with that instead of the viewfinder.
I use a Nikon D7500, but still have some lenses from my old F3, and I've learned how to use the old manual lenses with the digital camera. The advantages are that the max aperture can be as wide as f/1.4, so I get a lot of light through to the image sensor. Again, use a lot of light, and know about depth of field- a smaller aperture gives greater depth from foreground to back, but
MOST lenses are sharpest at the midpoint of the aperture scale. Another advantage with those manual lenses is that I can use extension tubes or an extension bellows for
extreme closeups. Yeah, lots of fiddling there, but the result is worthwhile. Closeup lenses don't give as good a result, but for a lot of things, are more than adequate.
So, there really isn't any great hidden secret to it other than use lots of light and turn all the automatic crap off!