Five types of beautiful insects: butterfly, bees, wasps, beetles and grasshoppers

You don't have to go far to find miracles. Sometimes they perch peacefully among leaves, sometimes they soar through the air, or occasionally hide among colorful flower petals. Like this dark branded swift butterfly, perched peacefully on a fresh leaf. From a distance, I saw it standing in a beautiful pose, its front wings pointing upwards, while its hind wings opened to the sides. It resembled a plane landing. As soon as I got close, it quickly closed its wings, and soon it was gone.

I was almost desperate to be left behind by this tiny butterfly, but nature gave me another surprise. A bee came over and landed on a blade of grass near me. My heart started pounding as I stared at this incredibly beautiful creature. As I was adjusting my focus, I was left behind again. I tried to remain calm, believing nature had something else in store for me to observe.

Sure enough, in another corner, a wasp was perched on an unopened flower bud. I quickly approached, trying to take a photo from a distance. It turned out to be playing a prank on me too. From a distance, I could see it was very calm, but when it got close, it immediately left me. Here, I was still trying to remain calm. Perhaps nature was teaching me to take photos at a fast pace.

In another corner, I saw a very beautiful beetle. The beetle was a metallic green, and when the sunlight reflected off its tiny body, it reflected a very beautiful sparkle, looking like a gem that had fallen from the sky and caught on the surface of the leaf. This beetle was a little different, it didn't leave, but instead continued to move back and forth on the leaf where it was standing.

Now let's take a look at the charm of a grasshopper, no less beautiful than any other insect, black with yellow stripes. This grasshopper behaved just like the other insects, it also left me.

All images were taken using a realme 7 Pro cellphone.



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11 comments
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That part where the beetle stayed while everything else kept vanishing felt like a tiny gift from the field. I like how you turned the chase into a reminder to shoot fast, because insects are sneaky little comedians. Do you use burst mode or focus lock on the Realme 7 Pro to catch those split-second poses? That beetle sounds like the only one who agreed to a photo contract.

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I just use regular zoom. Thank you for your warm comments, my friend.

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Makes sense. Your steady hand is doing the hard work there. If you ever want to try something new, tap to focus and lock exposure, or shoot a short video and pull the best frame later.

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Thanks for the input, bro. But locking the exposure doesn't work for objects that are constantly moving.

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Totally, exposure lock can fight you when the subject won’t sit still. What helps me is locking focus to a rough distance, leaving exposure on auto, then firing a burst or shooting a short 60 fps clip and grabbing the best frame. If your Realme has Pro mode, try a faster shutter with a fixed ISO so it stops hunting. Do you see tracking autofocus or spot metering in your camera settings?

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Nature is really beautiful we just need people like to show others that beauty.

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Yes, that's right. I feel proud to be able to share a glimpse of the beauty that many eyes often overlook. And I'm also glad that someone is willing to take the time to see the beauty I share. Thank you, bro.

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Many beautiful, colorful and attractive insects' photographs in one place- pretty awesome!

!ALIVE

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Yes, there are a lot of them there, but most of them run away when I approach them. Thank you for stopping by.

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