NOTES ABOUT THE BUTTERFLY PHOTOS
Tom Peterson

    Unless otherwise noted, photos are of free, unrestrained butterflies.  Photos are mostly of local butterflies, in Kane County or western DuPage County, Illinois.  Many of the photos were taken at Nelson Lake Marsh, about 8 miles west of Fermilab in Kane County, Illinois, where I am a volunteer butterfly monitor.
    Photos through the year 2001 were taken with my personal Sony Hi-8 camcorder and video-captured using "Snappy" (by Play, Inc.) on my Dell PC at home.  One might think, as I did at first, that it would be easy to wave the camcorder at active butterflies and select good shots with video-capture software.  However, not only does a camcorder, like any camera, have a certain "shutter speed" which cannot freeze rapid motion, but I found that much video is not in truly sharp focus.  So I use the camera much like a still camera, manually focussing and manually adjusting exposure with a resting butterfly in view.  Thus, I end up with about 5 to 10 seconds of video per shot, and the whole summer of photos requires only about an hour of video tape.  It is quite easy to select and capture just the desired pose on screen from video of, for example, a butterfly pumping its wings or actively getting nectar at a flower.  Although the quality of video capture is limited, the camcorder is an easy way to obtain reasonably good photos.
    From 2002 through 2005, most photos are taken with a Nikon 885 digital camera, providing better resolution and better color.  One of my first with this camera and still one of my favorites is of the mating pair of Great Spangled Fritillaries.
    In 2006, I switched to a Canon A620.  I use the compact "point and shoot" camera in close-up mode, just a few inches from the butterflies.  This allows me to easily carry the camera on walks in order to take advantage of opportunities.  Photos are then also in natural light, without flash. 
    The problem with this method, of course, is to get very close to resting butterflies.  Some butterflies, like the Coppers and the Gray Comma, make it easy by repeatedly returning to the same flower or perch.  A cool, sunny day when the butterfly is warming itself in the sun or an extremely attractive nectar source like thistle can provide relatively tame butterflies.  However, many of the photos, like those of the female dark form of the the Tiger Swallowtail, were just lucky encounters, and the butterflies were gone seconds after shooting the picture.


 

Legal Notices