Macro Photography - Lesson 21 Yoors Photography Course
Macro and close-up photography
Do you want to take beautiful pictures of small animals, or details of flowers, for example? Then you'll get started with Close-up photography or Macro photography. In this lesson, I'll give you tips that will help you get started to practice.!
Close-up or Macro
Most of the time, photos are called macro photos while it is officially a close-up photo. No problem of course, but it's good to know the difference. If the image falling on the sensor is 1:2 with reality, so the actual image is up to 2 times larger than your image, you speak of Close-up.
If your subject falls on your sensor at a big size, or even bigger, you will speak of a macro photo.

This photo was taken after a snow period. On this day it was thaw and the snow remains became beautiful drops on the fine twigs. Each drop is its own lens. Can you also see that the background soon becomes pretty blurred?
What to take a Macro photo
Telephoto
Superb blog again, you seem to be inexhaustible in your information.
I use a front lens Raynox DCR 250 for my camera and the picture is an example of that, a Waxflower (Chamelaucium uncinatum) whose flowers have about 1 cm diameter.