I Made A Macro Lens From Canon 18-55 And Was Surprised By The Shots It Can Take
The reversed lens is often used for cheap macro; simply reversing a camera lens, it magnifies things.
I used to buy a cheap reversing ring for my camera, used a manual zoom lens reversed for a while – it was good for extreme macro, but hard to use. OK, using reversed lenses is always hard, but we can make this comfortable… with aperture control from the camera.
So an idea came from a Youtube video (see in links): modify a cheap Canon 18-55 for reversing, with pulling control signals from the bayonet to the front of the camera (which became the backside now).
I simply grabbed a reversing ring from eBay, and an empty filter ring (needed for space for the wires). Placed the contact pins to the ring, connected wires to the lens control electronics on the new “front” (previously bottom) of the lens, and voilá: I had a reversed lens with aperture control, correct light metering… Autofocus does not work, but it will be not so useful, even it would work (so I disconnected the focus drive).
As the signal cable is mounted externally, I made some fixing for it, allowing the cable to move when zooming. Not a beautiful thing, but works!
The old 18-55 can be completely restored to the original state, but it’s much more useful for me as a reversed lens :) Now it has a brand label Chaos instead of Canon.
Since then (2014), I made a lot of photos with this lens, and it still works :) The reversed kit lens can produce a mapping rate around 2:1, which is very good for macro. Below you can see pictures of the building and captures with this thing.
More info: youtube.com
The bayonet of kit lens removed, the contacts mounted on the revesing ring
Drilled holes for the wires
Wiring almost done
Successful testing with temporary wiring
Building the final cable, with pin connectors
Final state
Both end requires a bottom cap
The new bayonet side
On camera (I have an 1100D)
Ant with external, off-camera flash. Subject distance is about 4-5cm with this lens
Spider portrait with on-camera flash
HDD heads
Clockwork (pocket watch)
Tiny grasshopper
Hoverfly portrait
Flower, about 5mm in diameter
Moss
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Share on FacebookVery cool! I had macro filters for my Nikkormat but lost EVERYTHING when I had to move into assisted living. Would've been fun to have a real macro lens.
Now throw some of those macro spacer rings on there. Might be sliiightly impossible to find focus but hey, it'd be interesting.
and this is why camera lens are super expensive and delicate. beautiful pics btw!
Very impressive pics.... I have visited an site where i found this some cool and useful pics.Follow the link : http://www.culexy.com/blog_diy_description.php?id=8
Do you have an instagram account? I'd love to follow your work there if you have shared other pics.
Very cool! I had macro filters for my Nikkormat but lost EVERYTHING when I had to move into assisted living. Would've been fun to have a real macro lens.
Now throw some of those macro spacer rings on there. Might be sliiightly impossible to find focus but hey, it'd be interesting.
and this is why camera lens are super expensive and delicate. beautiful pics btw!
Very impressive pics.... I have visited an site where i found this some cool and useful pics.Follow the link : http://www.culexy.com/blog_diy_description.php?id=8
Do you have an instagram account? I'd love to follow your work there if you have shared other pics.
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