Entwined

 Iodine Bonnet (Mycena filopes)

I can’t help myself, but I just love getting close to the small things in life, the microcosmos. Although my eyes are not what they used to be, I am always thrilled and delighted to look at things from a  different perspective. It is like peering into a different world.

I believe these two tiny closely entwined mushrooms are called the Iodine Bonnet (Mycena filopes), and they were that small both of them could fit on a pinky fingernail. But the challenge was to get to them first. They were growing on the thick bough of an old willow near my local river bank, and I had to get through stinging nettles and Himalayan Balsams to get there. And because the willow bough was in shade the lighting was not going to be straight forward.

I mostly use aperture priority mode when taking macro subjects, and today I dabbled a bit more in the manual mode to give myself some better control of the camera.  After all, these mushrooms were not going anywhere, unlike some subjects. It may have been easier to just use flash, but I felt it did not work so good, so I fiddled with the manual settings to try to get a reasonable balance of light and tone, to try and capture the right ambience of the moment, whilst tring to retain some detail in the subject. Tripods don’t really work for me, for I find them too restrictive, but with one elbow resting on the moss-covered willow bough I took quite a number of photographs. Most of which ended up in my PC’s recycle bin. I felt this one came out reasonably well to share here.

Photograph of Iodine Bonnet (Mycena filopes), taken September 2016, local river bank , Staffordshire. © Pete Hillman 2016. Camera used Nikon D7200, with Sigma 105mm macro lens. ISO 400. 1/60 sec. f/7.1.

 

24 thoughts on “Entwined

      • Arkenaten

        I can’t get the hang of the manual settings on the Canon I inherited so I keep it on auto and simply change the dial for macro or standard.

        When I look at old photos I have from when I used an Olympus OM10 the reproduction on the Canon on auto is far better.

        Oh, I snapped a bright red Kirby’s drop wing (dragonfly) this afternoon. Talk about a surprise.
        I’ll post a bit later.

        Liked by 1 person

      • Pete Hillman

        I use auto sometimes, depending on the subject, but for macro mainly aperture priority mode. I will look forward to your post!

        Like

Your thoughts ...

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.