@@diettoms It would be very Educational if you could make a Video on your Camera Set up for Viewing and Recording Images We Like Details my Friend , hardly anyone shows how they set up their Cameras , even Journey into the Microcosmos is guilty of this , seems to be a Trade Secret Thank You my Friend
Wow, I just bought a SWIFT380 2 months ago.. There is not enough info for amateur microscopy (compare to amateur astronomy for example). This is exactly what I'm looking for! I need to learn proper technique to have more fun with the hobby! For example: you explain what kind of problem we can expect, why, and how to overcome them. Brillant! I just subscribe.. Alex from Montréal
Well I don’t use it for my stuff but methyl cellulose is commonly used to increase the viscosity of the medium which, in turn, makes organisms move more slowly through it. www.flinnsci.com/api/library/Download/ac169fe52aec4a249dfab7beffce4f06
@rlwkirsch it depends on the organism - many euglenids are pretty slow movers, sometimes rotifers hang out for a bit. Another thing you can do is carefully prepare a sample without debris and then put a coverglass on that has a little dab of vaseline in each corner. Then you can carefully smush the coverglass down until you pin organisms in place without totally crushing them.
why not just print your desired filter pattern on a transparent foil with an inkjet printer? or even better, insert a transparent lcd display in place of your filter and edit the desired shape in real time with an app. or why not to leave a filter out completely and replace the light source with a a full color led panel or an oled display the will shine the desired color pattern directly? at the simplest, you could just create your color pattern in a drawing app in your phone and then place the phone under the stage/sample. fingers crossed!
For this I’m using a Sony a7III which is a pretty high end full frame DSLR. Unfortunately there aren’t any options around $300 that I’m in love with. Best I’ve found are the Hayear 34MP cameras on amazon that can do 1080/60
I never knew that the ping pong ball could be such a great pedagogical tool!! Thanks!
Thank you for putting this on RUclips. I learned a lot
Cool channel, very nice editing and the relaxed flow goes very well with the subject at hand. Keep it up :)
Thanks, hoping to get my hands on one of those JL scopes some day too! How hard is that to use compared to DIC?
@@diettoms It would be very Educational if you could make a Video on your Camera Set up for Viewing and Recording Images
We Like Details my Friend , hardly anyone shows how they set up their Cameras , even Journey into the Microcosmos is guilty of this , seems to be a Trade Secret
Thank You my Friend
Wow, I just bought a SWIFT380 2 months ago.. There is not enough info for amateur microscopy (compare to amateur astronomy for example).
This is exactly what I'm looking for! I need to learn proper technique to have more fun with the hobby!
For example: you explain what kind of problem we can expect, why, and how to overcome them. Brillant!
I just subscribe..
Alex from Montréal
❤❤❤ ⚘️🌷⚘️..Thank you Verry much..🙏🙏😊😊😊👍👍👍
Blue centre and yellow surround is my favourite Rheinberg set-up.
Yeah that’s a good one - played around with it on my IG a while back: instagram.com/p/CVOui33tQzO/?igshid=MmJiY2I4NDBkZg==
What microscope u use? I'm looking at some bh2? What your opinion thank you
Are you using plan objectives ???
what kind of camera are you using ???
I'm a amateur and need guidance
What do you do to get things like Rotifers or Euglena to slow down and hold still so you can film them?
Well I don’t use it for my stuff but methyl cellulose is commonly used to increase the viscosity of the medium which, in turn, makes organisms move more slowly through it. www.flinnsci.com/api/library/Download/ac169fe52aec4a249dfab7beffce4f06
@@diettoms you show euglena and a rotifer just sitting there. I have yet to get anything to hold still
@rlwkirsch it depends on the organism - many euglenids are pretty slow movers, sometimes rotifers hang out for a bit. Another thing you can do is carefully prepare a sample without debris and then put a coverglass on that has a little dab of vaseline in each corner. Then you can carefully smush the coverglass down until you pin organisms in place without totally crushing them.
why not just print your desired filter pattern on a transparent foil with an inkjet printer? or even better, insert a transparent lcd display in place of your filter and edit the desired shape in real time with an app. or why not to leave a filter out completely and replace the light source with a a full color led panel or an oled display the will shine the desired color pattern directly? at the simplest, you could just create your color pattern in a drawing app in your phone and then place the phone under the stage/sample. fingers crossed!
What camera are you using? make model ?? I have to return another one, 300 dollar camrea not half as good as my old 60 dollar cheap one.
For this I’m using a Sony a7III which is a pretty high end full frame DSLR. Unfortunately there aren’t any options around $300 that I’m in love with. Best I’ve found are the Hayear 34MP cameras on amazon that can do 1080/60