OhMayGod Macro photography is taken to the next level with this technology. The results are fascinating.

Admin 14.09
Macro photography is taken to the next level with this technology. The results are fascinating. -

The world is a pretty amazing place on a scale of human size, but when you consider there's so much we are not see? It is even more amazing. Thank you to microscopes and macro photography, the smallest world has become increasingly visible to us. Now, as technology advances, the small and the great, are increasingly visible to us.

macroscopic Solutions recently developed macropod, which the company calls "a low-cost, portable solution, three-dimensional imaging." Technology can take clear pictures, detailed the very, very small. Unlike a macro lens traditional, allowing a relatively shallow depth of field, macropod can do multiple exposures at different depths, each focusing. the images are then stitched together digitally to create an image that is quite developed, and quite remarkable. The technique is known as "focus stacking."

A blister beetle.

A blister beetle.

Flickr / macroscopic Solutions

black wasp, with measures

Black wasp, with measurements

Flickr / macroscopic Solutions

compound eye A black wasp.

A black wasp's compound eye.

Flickr / macroscopic Solutions

A black wasp face.

A black wasp face.

Flickr / macroscopic Solutions

Bumble bee

Bumble bee

Flickr / macroscopic Solutions

paper wasp

Paper wasp

Flickr / macroscopic Solutions

housefly

Housefly

Flickr / macroscopic Solutions

Jumping spider

Jumping spider

Flickr / macroscopic Solutions

another, cute, spider jump

Another, cuter, jumping spider

Flickr / macroscopic Solutions

a close up of the face of a jumping spider.

A closeup on a jumping spider's face.

Flickr / macroscopic Solutions

The human eye

The human eye

Flickr / macroscopic Solutions

The cells of an Asian Dayflower.

The cells of an Asiatic Dayflower.

Flickr / macroscopic Solutions

This image is about 250 micrometers in diameter.

The sheet of a shrug to 50x magnification.

The leaf of a shrug at 50x magnification.

Flickr / macroscopic Solutions

A closeup of some fall foliage.

A closeup of some fall foliage.

Flickr / macroscopic Solutions

Not only this technology open for photographers and those interested in aesthetics, but it can also allow scientists and researchers to preserve the details and colors that can be lost with microscope slides and stereoscope.

For a more detailed explanation of how the macropod works, check out this video:

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