I have been using the globe flash macro diffuser I made for the past six months. For close in macro images it really proved amazing. However it had a couple annoyances which I finally decided to address:
Two tweaks fixed both issues. First, the size of the globe was increased to 12 inches. This means it is large enough to completely cover the flash from the perspective of the subject. Second was connecting the globe to a lens hood which blocked the light which was making images hazy.
The image quality for 1X macro is about the same as the previous version but without the previous issues. That makes it as good as any macro flash which is commercially available and probably better.
To build it, I used the following materials:
The steps were pretty simple, although with the tools I had rather time consuming. Simply cut a hole in the acrylic disc for the lens to look through (I used a Dremmel), epoxy the disc to the lens hood, then epoxy the disc to the globe. Then epoxy the globe to the acrylic disc and cut the globe to shape(I used a hack saw). Since polyethylene is notoriously difficult to bond, I briefly. put it in a flame before making the connection.
Thus far this setup has been quite effective. I am a bit worried about the epoxy bond, it seems less sturdy than it was to the previous acrylic globe, but the last one survived six months of abuse so I expect this one will do alright.
Looking at its reflection in the mirror.
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After five months of using this I am still pretty happy with the setup. The epoxy didn't hole though so for the last month or two I have been using hot glue for about two months. That has been doing much better, although that may be because I did a better job of sanding it to a rough surface and exposing the surface to flame.
@glmory Thanks for sharing this with me!! It definitely works well for you. You take beautiful pictures!
did you mount the raynox on the lens hood and not directly onto the lense? that does work?
Yeah, I was a bit worried about it but it seemed to work fine.
Possibly altered the magnification some, but produced sharp pictures with additional magnification.
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