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Reddit mentions of INSEESI Macro Lens Extension Tube with Lens Body and Rear Cap for Canon EOS EF Canon1D 1Ds Series 7D 5D 5DMarkII 5DMark III etc Lens

Sentiment score: 3
Reddit mentions: 5

We found 5 Reddit mentions of INSEESI Macro Lens Extension Tube with Lens Body and Rear Cap for Canon EOS EF Canon1D 1Ds Series 7D 5D 5DMarkII 5DMark III etc Lens. Here are the top ones.

INSEESI Macro Lens Extension Tube with Lens Body and Rear Cap for Canon EOS EF Canon1D 1Ds Series 7D 5D 5DMarkII 5DMark III etc Lens
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    Features:
  • Extension tubes can be an easy way to add macro capabilities to non-macro lenses or even to increase the amount of magnification that you get from your dedicated macro lenses.
  • By placing distance between your camera body and lens, focusing distance is shortened and the effect of magnifying your subject is created. Extension tubes are thus commonly used for macro photography and sometimes for close-up portraits.
  • This extension tube set strikes a nice balance between versatility and features. The 13mm, 21mm and 31mm tube lengths can be used individually, or combined when you want to experiment with different magnifications.
  • Easy to use, simple to mount and dismount by quick release lock. .
  • After-sales service: If you have any questions about the extension tube, please feel free to contact us
Specs:
ColorRed

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Found 5 comments on INSEESI Macro Lens Extension Tube with Lens Body and Rear Cap for Canon EOS EF Canon1D 1Ds Series 7D 5D 5DMarkII 5DMark III etc Lens:

u/johnnywash1 · 6 pointsr/Watches

Hi all! Recent purchase, the famed 58. I bought this hoping to settle down to a one-watch guy, but I'm just not sure I can. The detail work on this watch is wonderful, though: the way the rose gold around the indices brightens up the yellow gold around hands; the paper-like matte finish of the dial; and of course, the perfect proportions.

All that said, I'm moving on from this one and on to the next. I really liked how my macro shots are progressing, though, so I thought I would share here! If anyone is curious, I didn't use a dedicated macro lens for this shot, just a set of very inexpensive macro tube extensions mounted to my 85mm lens. This is slightly cropped from the larger version, which I find more striking but really wanted to showcase the dial here, so I cropped. I'm not sure what the rules are for cross-posting, so I will refrain from posting the imgur sales album directly, but it is in my history.

u/Whowhatwhen2 · 2 pointsr/AnalogCommunity

This is what I bought. They occasionally lose their connect with the body, but usually jiggering it a little bit, or just turning the body off and back on again, will fix the issue: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01IR5CSV8/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o05__o00_s01?ie=UTF8&psc=1

u/GIS-Rockstar · 2 pointsr/photography

As long as you're trying an extension tube, and not one of those macro lens attachments that screw onto the end of your lens like a filter. The magnification one is useless on those. If you have 20-40 bucks for probably okay results then definitely give it a shot. I'd love to hear how it goes.

u/hnk007 · 1 pointr/AskPhotography

Something I never see mentioned often is cheap macro tubes like this. I swear these are the most unknown cheap piece of camera gear that is actually good. I got a set similar to these ones a couple of years ago and they've been great. They allow you to use your own lenses, and since they go behind the lens there isn't a ton of quality loss vs a cheap piece of glass that just screws onto the front. They even have a passthrough for the electronics so autofocus still works.

Here's some examples using those tubes shot through Canon L glass.

u/av1cenna · 1 pointr/analog

The answer to (1) depends on what lens you are using with the extension tubes, but yeah they should be fine if you just want something cheap. Note that those tubes have no electrical contacts, so you will have to stop down the lens on your camera, hold down the DoF preview button (if your camera has one) then disconnect the lens from the camera so that the aperture stays closed down. Sounds kind of unreliable, and not having any easy aperture control is a paint. You also won't have autofocus, which can actually be really handy for shooting negatives.

For cheap tubes, I'd rather pay an extra $10-20 and get ones that support aperture control and autofocus like these or these or these.

As far as (2) yeah tracing paper or white wax paper or baking paper works well. The brighter your light is, the thicker of paper you can use, and the more diffuse the light is going to be. People also use white plexiglass / plastic sheets if you have those handy.