tutorial: scorpion photography

pandinus

Arachnoking
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i thought that this would be a good idea as more of us are getting more and more and more beautiful species that require beautiful photographs.

Even though macro photography can be a royal pain in the butt, it's worth every bit of stress and trouble. The great thing about it is that you can create realistic natural settings without a jungle, or a desert, etc. For this demo, i decided to photograph T. serrulatus.

1. get a spot of floor or counter clear. you want an open space in case your bug tries to bolt on ya.


2.Choose a base upon which you will build your set. this can be a log, some dirt, a rock, anything. in this case i decided to use a strip of cork bark.


3. Now is when you start building up on your base. To do this, i first took a clump of terrarium moss...

and then spread it out over the top of the bark, making it look as if it has moss growing on it. I also reccomend misting the moss to make it look more realistic and spongy.


4. Now, for the top layer. To create the sense of a forest floor, grab some dead leaves. My personal favorites are the exotic looking magnolia leaves...

Now just like before, you arange the leaves on/around your base in the most appealing and natural way you can find. I reccomend another light misting at this point as the droplets will collect on the leaves giving the sense of a fresh rain, morning dew, or just a humid environment.


5. now comes possibly the most important part, the lighting. Macro photography requires a great deal of light, and the wrong light can wash out your pic, give it a yellow tint, or just be too dim. I typically use a standard desk lamp as a spot, and since in my opinion the best light is natural sunlight, i use a bulb that uses both UVA and UVB rays to simulate this.


6. The position of the light is also important to the process. placing the light directly overhead can wash out the picture or make it seem phony. The trick is place the light in such a way that you have natural shadows. it often helps to have the light shining ACROSS the set, rather than shining on it. Notice in the pic how the light highlights certain areas but also casts natural shadows. A flat, uniform lighting can kill a picture's authenticity.


7. Now is the time to add the scorpion.


8. When shooting the scorpion, avoid using the zoom on your camera as much as you can, instead try and get your camera as close as possible(remembering to keep your flash off). Not only does the zoom not work terribly reliably in macro, but by shooting the scorpion up close, you create bold depths of feild and other focusing tricks unattainable while zooming. Also, dont point-and-shoot, or just take birds-eye-view shots. Get down on level with the scorpion, play around with different angles, and lightings. Take many many pictures. you can always delete extras, but you might not be able to reproduce the same pic again.


9. the final step is to polish up your photo. When you upload it onto a computer, you can enhance the picture by adjusting the brightness, contrast, and gamma exposure, which can be done in almost any photo-editing program. Dont worry, this is not considered to be altering the photo, as you are only tweaking things, not changing them, and you are adjusting nothing that a photographer in a darkroom couldn't.



Congratulations! that's it! Hopefully your end product will be something you can be proud of. You can use this method to create any kind of habbitat. Good luck! If you have any questions, feel free to ask. I also wouldn't mind seeing your results after using this tutorial.


Cheers,
John
 

musihuto

Arachnodemon
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put your scorpion on the ground?!?
have you completely lost your mind?!? :eek: :wall:
:embarrassed:
- munis

P.S. GE and other companies make lightbulbs that are designed to mimic the sun in the spectrum and concentration of various wavelengths they emit.

P.P.S. nice guide, but for the love of god, just put the stuff and your scorpion *in a container* on the ground! :)
 

pandinus

Arachnoking
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put your scorpion on the ground?!?
have you completely lost your mind?!? :eek: :wall:
:embarrassed:
- munis

P.S. GE and other companies make lightbulbs that are designed to mimic the sun in the spectrum and concentration of various wavelengths they emit.

P.P.S. nice guide, but for the love of god, just put the stuff and your scorpion *in a container* on the ground! :)
if you feel you are not comfortable enough to do this, yes, you can just as easily place the scorpion in a container. I however have never lost a scorpion doing this and often have better results doing this than using a container.
 

JSN

Arachnodemon
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I'd be too lazy to clean that mess up after the photographing sesh...
 

Crono

Arachnobaron
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Some members here actually put their inverts in the grass outside to take pics, so I wouldn't worry about the carpet that much. I would watch my step though :D

Love the shoes by the way
 

G. Carnell

Arachnoemperor
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Some members here actually put their inverts in the grass outside to take pics, so I wouldn't worry about the carpet that much. I would watch my step though :D

Love the shoes by the way
heh, i tried that! its wicked ;)


nice thread Pandinus ;)
 

musihuto

Arachnodemon
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wow... you guys actually do this with androctonus, tityus, parabuthus, leiurus, etc.??? :?

- munis
 

Prymal

Arachnoking
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John,

On the carpet? Either you're single or the wife/gf was away. Mine would just shoot me! LOL

THANK YOU very much for such a concise practical guide. Lighting always seems to work against me and is my #1 trouble area when shooting. Again, thank you very much for taking the time to write up this concise manual - great job!

Musi - Not just on the floor. I've had adult fems of A. mauritanicus, A. crassicauda, M. eupeus, and H. j. salei advance across a set, up onto my lens, up my forehead and nestle in the nest atop my head! It's all part of the "get up & personal" with your scorps! LOL
However, my most memorable experience was when my adult male H. spadix "Ares" charged my camera and struck the lens and body repeatedly trying his best to kill the big bothersome thing! There were drops of venom on the lens. I'd rather deal with the Andros than this hateful beast!
One final note: while all potentially dangerous scorps command respect, few are actually out to get us.
Regarding Androctonus: if you've had Andros for any amount of time, one thing you'll quickly come to observe is that most of their caudal attacks are actually non-penetrative but in fact, powerful clubbing attacks designed to discourage a potential predator from pressing/pursuing an attack against the scorp.
A full-grown adult fem A. mauritanicus can deliver a very powerful blow with that massive cauda.
Others, like A. bicolor and for the most part, A. crassi, are runners and prefer rapid sprints into the safety of nearby cover. Even the "Queen of Scorpions", A. australis, will lash out with powerful non-penetrative caudal strikes.
The above is not meant to imply that these scorpions are completely inoffensive. Instead, it's designed to present a more "realistic" picture of their defensive behaviors. I've yet to be attacked by any of my 30+ Andros.

Luc
 
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Nazgul

Arachnoangel
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Hi Luc,

I´m having the suspicion you are allied to the wrong woman ;P. My girlfriend is sleeping inside a room with a few hundred scorpions in it and she doesn´t even care catching big B. dubia with her bare hands (something even most of my male friends won´t do for some reason). Nevertheless I´d never put a scorpion on the floor, I´m always arranging my photo setups inside a plastic winnow.
 

Scorpfanatic

Arachnoprince
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hmm very very nice thread, thanks pandinus,

i usually have two different huge enclosure, one desert, and one tropical. but most of the time i try to take pic of my scorpions in its own enclosure since most of them are big enough! heheh...

only tried baby spinifer on my hand, the rest all in huge shallow tanks :p~

digital mirco fuction rocks!
 

pandinus

Arachnoking
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actually, shooting on the floor is kind of a new practice for me. ordinarily i use a very large, shallow base like a box lid simply for the practicality of cleanup. I'm not worried at all about the scorps.in the worst case scenario, which i have only had to do once, i have a large empty delicup that i place over runaways at hand at all times. but as i've said, i only had to do this once ever, and that was with a rather nasty vaejovis. if you are uncomfortable with bare floor/plastic lid, by all means, use a deeper cage. this is not the important part of the tutorial, in fact, it's probably the least important.


John
 

musihuto

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yep... my v. spinigerus fled under the couch once.. :eek: i was having a heart attack for the three minutes until i found him again!

- munis

actually, shooting on the floor is kind of a new practice for me. ordinarily i use a very large, shallow base like a box lid simply for the practicality of cleanup. I'm not worried at all about the scorps.in the worst case scenario, which i have only had to do once, i have a large empty delicup that i place over runaways at hand at all times. but as i've said, i only had to do this once ever, and that was with a rather nasty vaejovis. if you are uncomfortable with bare floor/plastic lid, by all means, use a deeper cage. this is not the important part of the tutorial, in fact, it's probably the least important.


John
 

EAD063

Arachnoprince
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pandin.. you are truley a master.... G.D. major? You got the sweet icon also!
 

dGr8-1

Arachnoknight
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Great thread Pandinus.

My C.gracilis bolted out on me. And tried to sneak under the dining table. :eek: Of course you can imagine my profused sweating that time. hehehe
 

Mega

Arachnosquire
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Good job!
But, how long time do u need for cleaning up the carpet
 

Nikos

Arachnoprince
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dirt and scorpions on the floor (with a carpet too!!)!!!
someone is either single or lucky enough to find the best human female on earth!
 

Aviculariinae

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Hi,

@John, thanks for the good ideas on the lighting.

@Luc,
One final note: while all potentially dangerous scorps command respect, few are actually out to get us.
Regarding Androctonus: if you've had Andros for any amount of time, one thing you'll quickly come to observe is that most of their caudal attacks are actually non-penetrative but in fact, powerful clubbing attacks designed to discourage a potential predator from pressing/pursuing an attack against the scorp.
A full-grown adult fem A. mauritanicus can deliver a very powerful blow with that massive cauda.
Ive also seen this with H.Judaicus,its quite frighting how strong they can be without actually using their sting.

@ Alex, Surely this women you speak of does not exist and is only a figment of your imagination.............:)



Bren
 

Arlius

Arachnodemon
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Nice ideas, a note though, they are more for P&S cameras, not SLRs, as to avoid any confusion.... (couple things I don't quite agree with, but it works)
 
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