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Takumar S-M-C 100/4.0 Macro (M42) on Fuji X-H1 ... :)


DSCF8931 by Enzio Harpaintner, auf Flickr

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The first picture posted with my new X100F and I'm loving this little wonder..

 

 

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According to Wikipedia, this is: Hemaris diffinis, the snowberry clearwing, is a moth of the order Lepidoptera, family Sphingidae. This moth is sometimes called "hummingbird moth" or "flying lobster".

This is the first time I have seen one of these out in the wild so to speak, at first I thought it was a large bumblebee.

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  • 2 weeks later...

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XF60mm

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pt. 1

Summer is going strong here ... hot and humid. Bare feet and iced lemonade, that sort of thing. But:

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pt. 2

... when these wild flowers are blooming, it is time to plan those autumn color trips! :)

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Fuji X100F

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X-T2, 80mm macro lens

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X-T2, 80mm macro lens

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First time out with new X-T3 and 18-55mm kit lens. Beautiful San Francisco Bay Area morning with blossoms everywhere. To say I'm impressed with the image quality would be an understatement. Coming from the Canon system, I'm just blown away with the results.

Cheers!

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X-T2 & 80mm macro lens

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      This is the equivalent of 43 minutes, 40 seconds of exposure. NGC 1502 is a neat little cluster located in the Camelopardalis Constellation. This region of space was thought to be fairly empty by early astronomers, but as you can see, there is a lot there. Kemble's Cascade (a.k.a. Kemble 1) is named for Father Lucian Kemble, a Canadian Franciscan friar who wrote about it to Walter Scott Houston, an author for the Sky And Telescope magazine. Houston named the asterism for Fr. Kemble and the name "stuck". NGC 1501 is the Oyster Nebula. A longer focal length telescope is needed to bring this one into good viewing range, but it is well worth the effort. NGC 1502: https://skyandtelescope.org/online-gallery/ngc-1502/ Camelopardalis Constellation: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camelopardalis Kemble's Cascade (and NGC 1501: The Oyster Nebula): https://www.constellation-guide.com/kembles-cascade/ Arrrrrr Matey.
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