Virama: EDIT: I feel rude. I'd like to say that the hedward's bee photograph is AMAZING. I know, I've attempted to photograph these little bastards quite a few times and only have a couple of good ones out of hundreds. They're HARD to do - very nice lens, good bokeh technique there. What camera make and what lens in particular do you have/use?
I love my Canon EOS 5D Mark II. I have a 50mm prime lens and a 24-105 but really do want to get a 200+ so I can do some real zoom photographs of butterflies, flowers and insects.
Green smiles was taken with, believe it or not, my first camera - a Sony 3.1MP, it was old, chunky as hell but took exquisite macro pictures. The next camera, an Olympus 1020u deeply disappointed me. Even though it was 10.1MP the Sony SHITS all over it. I.e. "They don't make them like they used to."
No worries, this is one of those rare occasions where spending a fortune on lenses is a reasonable solution. The body itself is nothing special at this point, I use an EOS-10D, a phenomenal camera in its time, but I've had mine for 8 years on July 3rd. The key in that regards is that I've been using it for so long that I see what the camera sees, to the point of colors being skewed to match.
The lens though is probably what made this work. I invested a while back in the excellent Canon 70-200mm F2.8L IS, IIRC I had the IS off as I was working from a tripod as a support.
The results were pretty impressive to me, the focus was right on, and I could probably crop in a lot more than what Stuff did and still have something workable, I'm just a real stickler for doing no manipulations of any sort, apart from occasional gentle cropping.
BTW, nice shot, I can totally see why they liked it.
Stuff: It is a little distracting but sometimes I cheat . . . =)
What used to take hours in the darkroom takes minutes in PS. Course this is a little too much enlargement. I usually try to frame several shots clearing any distractions out of the way before starting my session. Hehe, 4x5 was a very slow process though I found it helped with 35 mm and 2 1/4 x 2 1/4 as well. Slows you down so you can "see".
Edit: I just took a pod from elsewhere in the shot to cover the blurry flower.
I tend to shy away from doing anything beyond basic conversion of the raw image and slight cropping. It's me being particular, but it's what's led my technique improvement over the years.
It's not that there's anything wrong with using such techniques, it's just that I tend to like the realism that comes from images more or less straight out of the camera and the pride that I can feel when I have to say that no I didn't photoshop the image.
But, ultimately, it's just how I see the image, I've been using this body for so many years ago that my perceptions of color and space have changed to match it, I don't think I could do any better than what it gives me, even if I wanted to.