Lighting group meeting #2 Topic:Macro

2:00pm, Sat, 28 Feb 2026

Event Details

Type of event: Workshop
Start time: 2:00pm
End time: 4:30pm
Venue: To be advised
Description: Lighting group sessions February 2026
Topic: Macro and Close-up Photography

What is macro photography?
How do macro lenses differ from standard lenses?
What are extension tubes?
  • Extension tubes are an empty tube that goes between your camera and the lens to move the lens further from the image sensor. This lets you focus the lens at a closer distance to the subject but give a very shallow depth of field. They generally come in a set of varying sizes and can be stacked to increase the length. As there is a relationship between the length of the extension tube and  the focal length of the lens they work better with shorter lenses.
  • https://photofocus.com/photography/extension-tubes-the-good-the-bad-the-ugly/

What are teleconverters or extenders?
What are close up filters? Note that you can also stack these 3 items above to increase magnification further

What are depth of field and focus challenges and how are they overcome?
  • Work out how to magnify your view prior to taking the shot. I generally use the 5x magnification and manual focus.
  • Turn on focus peaking on your camera so you can see which areas are in focus.
  • Very shallow depth of field so shooting at small apertures might help - f16-f22. Note that this may also introduce diffraction which can degrade image sharpness.
  • Focus stacking, check out whether you can do this in camera, if not then load your images into a post-processing software such as photoshop.
  • https://digital-photography-school.com/a-beginners-guide-to-focus-stacking/
  • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=39zOwiG4sqk

What are the lighting challenges and how are they overcome?
  • Generally macro photography uses very small apertures which restricts the light
    • Use longer exposure times if subjects are not moving
    • Add light
  • Usually the lens is very close to the subject and may cast shadows with standard lighting setups.
    • Use a macro ring flash on the front of your camera
    • Buy a bracket assembly with multiple, low power flash units
    • Light the subject from the side and/or top
    • Use a light tent
  • As in all photography, using flash can help freeze movement in your subjects.

Gear you might bring
  • Camera, spare batteries, tripod, remote shutter release (can your phone do this?), 3 stop ND filter
  • Macro lens or a lens that has a short focusing distance. Your phone or point and shoot cameras often have a macro function.
  • Extension tubes, extenders, close up lenses, focusing rails
  • Macro ring flash units, brackets to mount flash for macro photography, standard flash units that can be used off-camera, light box, gels or coloured LED lights, small reflectors, even a torch if you are desperate.
  • A small subject or scene to photograph
  • A subject or scene to photograph
  • Backgrounds