I tried the reversed macro lens way back in 2012 for the first time. Back then, I first photographed things that mostly weren't moving at all or just very little.
Turned out that the world is really interesting when you look at it from a close perspective, even the non-living things. Drops on a DVD disc, bubbles in a water bottle, concrete, electronic components, mechanical instruments... all of that can look very different from normal when you get closer. And a double ratio reversed lens is more than enough for this.
To be honest, I haven't stopped taking macro pictures entirely, especially when it came to colder months of the year when you couldn't find insects and plants alive in nature. Instead, I used artificial objects, which you can photograph anytime at home.
I collected some of the pictures from the last 7-8 years, and hope some of you will be surprised when looking at the details of how some everyday stuff can look from up close.
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#1
Water drops on a DVD disc, exposed to sunlight.
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#2
Plastic jewels on a Christmas decoration.
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#3
The mini-universe of a shampoo bottle.
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#4
Miniature city of a broken LCD screen.
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#5
Drops in a water bottle, reversed lens, with the aperture wide open, and sunshine.
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#6
These are also drops in a water bottle.
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#7
Not a real macro: water bottle on direct sunlight, photographed from up-close.
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#8
Broken phone screen.
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#9
Bubbles in a hand sanitizer.
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#10
An RGB LED...but it's actually B-R-G.
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#11
This happens if a drop of water gets into your phone's USB connector and simply dries out. It destroyed (oxidated) some of the connector's pins which were soldered to the phone's mainboard - this is the backside of the connector. Macro can be very useful for documenting electronic repairs, I often use it when I'm repairing stuff.
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#12
HDD heads on both sides of a disc.
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#13
Tip of a sewing needle.
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#14
Network - bubbles in a soap bottle.
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#15
Fujitsu MBM27C32 EPROM chip. EPROMs are programmable, erasable ROM memories, widely used in the '70s and '80s. They can be erased with UV light, so they have a small glass over the chip itself...
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#16
Jewel bearings...
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#17
Clockwork (pocket watch).
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#18
Also drops in a bottle, but with flash... I really don't know how the flower pattern got there - can be the reflection of the manufacturer's logo.
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#19
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#20
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#21
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#22
Tip of a needle used in electrical testing equipment. It's only a little broader than a sewing needle's head.
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#23
Also not a real macro: just a close-up of a lamp with a telephoto lens.
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#24
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#25
Beads up-close.
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#26
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#27
Metal tea filter.
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#28
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#29
Broken LCD.
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#30
2609 - Russian wristwatch.
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#31
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#32
SMD diodes on a printed circuit board.
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#33
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#34
This image was taken with a tandem lens (Canon 18-55 and 70-300 together), which produces very high magnification, but it's very hard to use. Even the traces and components on the chip can be seen. The 4 long things are the wires which are connecting the chip to the output pins of the package.
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