Season 2026-2027 Theme Competition

The theme competition night takes place on Thursday 22nd October 2026, with images to be submitted by the 1st October. All photos should have been taken after the closing date of the previous season (23rd April 2026).
The theme choices for this season are as follows:

1. Close Up / Macro Photography
2. Industrial Heritage in Scotland 

A maximum of three images can be submitted by members for each of the mono print, colour print and projected digital image competitions (PDI)

PDI requirements: jpeg format, sRGB colour profile, maximum size: 1600 x 1200 pixels. 

Close Up / Macro Photography

Macro photography reveals detail that is normally invisible to the eye. It transforms small subjects into dramatic landscapes of texture, colour, and structure. This genre rewards patience, precision, and creative experimentation.

What This Theme Encourages

Detailed studies of insects, flowers, plants, and natural textures. Abstract compositions created from everyday objects. Creative use of lighting to emphasise fine detail. Exploration of miniature worlds and unseen structures.

Subjects to Explore

Insects & Arachnids – Butterflies, bees, beetles, spiders; ideal for capturing compound eyes, wing patterns, and behaviour.
Flowers & Plants – Petals, stamens, pollen, leaf veins, moss, fungi
Textures & Patterns – Wood grain, fabric fibres, rust, peeling paint, feathers, ice crystals
Water Droplets – Refraction effects, droplets on glass, droplets on petals
Everyday Objects – Coins, jewellery, watch mechanisms, electronics, food textures
Abstract Macro – Intentional shallow focus, colour fields, shapes, and patterns.

Technical Considerations

Magnification

Macro lenses typically offer 1:1 magnification, meaning the subject is recorded at life-size on the sensor. Extension tubes or close-up filters can achieve similar results at lower cost

Depth of Field

At macro distances, depth of field becomes extremely shallow.

Techniques to manage this include:

Stopping down to f/8-f/16
Using focus stacking
Aligning the camera parallel to the subject plane

Lighting

Macro subjects often benefit from controlled lighting:

LED panels
Ring lights
Diffused flash
Reflectors for natural light
DIY diffusers (paper, foam, cloth)

Stability

Because focus is critical:

Tripods
Focus rails
Remote shutter release
Using live view for precise manual focus

Creative Approaches:

Background Control

Macro backgrounds can be distracting. Use:

Coloured card
Natural bokeh
Fabric
Distance between subject and background

Composition

Rule of thirds
Symmetry
Leading lines within textures
Negative space
Extreme close-ups for abstraction

Behaviour & Timing

For insects:

Early morning (cool temperatures = slower movement)
Overcast days for soft light
Patience and observation

Common Challenges & Solutions

Subject movement → Increase shutter speed, use flash, photograph early in the day.
Shallow focus → Focus stack or adjust angle.• Harsh light → Diffuse flash or use natural shade.
Camera shake → Tripod, rail, or image stabilisation.• Finding subjects → Gardens, parks, window sills, household objects.

Macro Image Ideas for Members

Dew on spiderwebs
Close-up of a feather
Frost crystals on leaves
The inside of a flower
Watch gears or mechanical parts
Textures of food (citrus peel, bread crust, chocolate)
Eyes of insects
Water droplets refracting a background image
Abstract patterns in everyday items

Sample Images

Macro flower detail – Close-up insect portrait – Texture and pattern macro study 

Industrial Heritage in Scotland

Scotland’s industrial past is rich and varied, spanning shipbuilding, mining, steel production, railways, and engineering. This theme invites members to explore the structures, machinery, and environments that shaped Scotland’s industrial identity.

What This Theme Encourages

Architectural studies of historic industrial sites.
Documentary-style images showing machinery, workshops, or tools
Atmospheric photographs of abandoned or repurposed industrial spaces
Creative interpretations of industrial textures, shapes, and materials.

Suggested Subjects

Shipyards and maritime engineering heritage
Former steelworks and foundries
Railway infrastructure and historic stations
Canals, bridges, and industrial transport routes.

Image Samples

Scottish industrial heritage architecture – Abandoned factory interior – Shipbuilding heritage scene