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  1. Excellent article. I too am facing challenges with bellows. The costs go up fixing this. I bought some enlarger lens and the adapter to refer them as well as a what apses for a micro scale to move the subject back and forth. Very much indoor gear. I will eventually post on it. I did a blog post on extension tubes and included a shot from the bellow. The Raynox is excellent value for the money.

    1. Yes – you can get some huge magnification ratios but unfortunately you also have to get very close to the subject. Mind you it depends what you are photographing – if it’s not alive it may not matter that you are close. Thanks for the comments by the way.

        1. I have used them outdoors, but with a longer focal length lens – 135mm so I got less magnification and therefore less light loss. It was also a sunny day and I used a tripod

          1. That’s what I thought. Like most things I need to learn more before I get into the wild. Another potential idea to achieve the same end, magnification without light loss, are helicoid focusing rings. Endless solutions. With the bellows I just wanted something to work in the winter.

    1. Yes I’ve just recently see one of those which adapts nex to M42 so I had thought of getting one. However I suspect that there will be some light loss because it’s working by moving the lens away from the sensor – a sort of adjustable extension tube.

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