Photographs were taken on March 1, 2026.
Today I want to talk a little about macro photography.
Recently, it has become my main obsession. It’s difficult, sometimes frustrating, but incredibly rewarding. Macro allows you to step a few levels below normal human perception — into a world of texture, micro-geometry and details that simply don’t exist to the naked eye. You think you’re photographing a flower, but in reality you’re exploring a landscape.
Of course, the road is never perfectly smooth.
To shoot macro properly, you need a lot of light. Depth of field at close distances is razor-thin, so you have to stop the aperture down — sometimes much more than you’re used to. Close the aperture, and if you don’t compensate with light, the image becomes dark very quickly. It’s always a balancing act between sharpness, noise and exposure.
But today, while reviewing my shots, I noticed something I had never really seen before — dozens of tiny black dots scattered across the frame.
At first I thought it was some strange artifact. It turned out to be something far more mundane: dust on the sensor. I had stopped the aperture down enough for the first time that it revealed every microscopic particle sitting inside the camera. Macro doesn’t forgive anything. It shows everything.
I couldn’t publish the photos like that, of course. So I spent a good amount of time in Lightroom manually removing the spots. Most of them are gone now, but a few still survived. After processing dozens of images, I realized how much time this kind of correction steals from you. In the future, I may simply leave minor imperfections as they are. Sometimes perfection costs too much.
Tomorrow I’ll have to clean the sensor.
Honestly, I’m a little nervous about it. I’ve read the instructions, I have the proper tools, and technically I understand what to do. But touching something that delicate for the first time feels like defusing a tiny, expensive bomb.
If you’ve done it before and have advice — I’d really appreciate it. Experience is always better than theory.
Macro teaches patience. And apparently, it also teaches you how to keep your gear clean. 📸 🌿 ✨
I write my texts myself, correct mistakes and translate via ChatGPT (which is not a violation on Hive)! All photos were taken by me personally - I am a beginner photographer, so I ask professionals not to judge strictly.
Thank you for sharing these moments with me! Until new stories and new holidays! ✌️.
Camera đź“·: Sony Alpha 7 IV full-frame
Lens đź”: Sony FE 70-200mm F: 2.8 GM OSS II
Lens đź”: Sony FE 90mm F2.8 Macro G OSS
Lens đź”: Sony FE 24–70mm f/2.8 GM II
Processed đź› : Lightroom