It's a nice camera for the price. The pictures tend to be quite nice. It does a nice job with electronic photos, although the reversed lens thing cant be done with it right now as far as I know. The prime lens thats on it right now is fairly decent.
It can take raw video. (Using Magic Lantern.fm ) Using ML it can use various profiles that increase the color gamut. Which make for very nice cinematography-like images. Its low light sensitivity is also quite good. For using for videography its quite good, (but only up to 720p, not higher.) although the focusing control is non-optimal unless you get a cage to mount it in which makes it easier/smoother to focus. I dont have that right now.
I do have a RPI and camera.. but not the high quality camera. That is around $75 with a lens for it. It takes a wide variety of lenses with various adapters.
Overall I am impressed with the quality of images taken even with the cheaper RPI camera. (Which is now really cheap on ebay, only around $5. It takes decent, large resolution images.
The HDMI Video Capture card lets me plug the EOSM into the computer easily and conveniently, and the quality of the captured images is surprisingly good. It will work with any HDMI anything.
I didnt have this before, nor had I found a decent USB camera. So now I can use the EOSM just by plugging it into the little USB dongle, and wow, it looks nice.
The other means of capturing HDMI are expensive and not so good.. I had bought a Lenking HDMI capture box that does it but with a bit of lag. That was the best I had found to date.. And not so great.
So now its possible to use a Canon DSLR directly and that means that all sorts of decent options are available there for macro photography.
I have a very fine focus plastic macro stand.. It works great with my EOSM. And allows very fine focus on rails. It would work for image slicing.
I would be happy to take any specific kind of image youd like, if you can walk me through it.. And I also have some very nice lighting I can use right now. Some new warm white LED lights I have gotten recently for reading also make great photo lights.
And they are very cool considering the light they put out.
What to take a picture of, electronics wise.. ? I have a junk box.. whats in there? Some wifi equipment that no longer is secure.. so wont be used.. Not its usual number of junk PCBs.. Currently have some recent purchases but have not jet been relegated to "junk" status. Still might be photoworthy.
Alternately Various antennas I could take photos of recently bought LPDAs and a tindie Log spiral. (that works surprisingly well for GPS) Those two antennas work well (both of them) for locating broadband RFI. I also have a LPDA for 400-1000 Mhz built by WA2VZB
I also recently got an MSI 100 MSI 2500 SDR for $20. It works okay with broadcast FM. I have both of these antennas also..
https://antennatestlab.com/antenna-examples/polar-plots-of-two-inexpensive-pcb-lpda-antennas I have a bunch of antennas made by Wa2VJB. I find most of them to be pretty decent. I also have some LNAs made by him. He sells PCBs for very little for some of his stuff.. its a pretty good deal.
They both work well.. and are very good for locating RFI sources when paired up with something like an hackrf. His 400-1000 Mhz LPDA would also make a decent ham antenna for 440 MHz. It has a fair amount of gain on that band..
. The higher frequency one is also good.. Better for finding RFI.
Very directional. So you can figure out exactly where the noise originates simply by pointing to it.
These antennas if photographed well can be informative.. Because one can make them one's self.