Rita,
Paper towel works fine too. My other diffuser is a sto-fen plastic diffuser with an extra layer of diffusing plastic inside and two layers of paper towel on the outside. Here is a shot taken with that diffuser (using a 36mm extension tube, which you can see in the photo of my other diffuser, to get closer):
John--I'm not sure what your point is about magnification. One can't tell the magnification or distance to the subject without knowing how much the image was cropped, but if one doesn't crop, this is in the vicinity of 1:1. A Canon crop sensor is roughly 22mm across, and a honeybee is perhaps 12 mm or so long. So a bee taking up half the frame is roughly 1:1. That is much closer than your shot of a butterfly and close enough to have very thin depth of field.
Dan

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Must admit I got the numbers wrong. As taken she had a dof of more than 22mm. Actually given the pixel size of 16mp m 4/3 she might have obtained a sharper image at F8 but the dof would be reduced to 16mm. Even f5.6 might show a further improvement., dof would still be more than 11mm. This the main problem with the system. Tiny pixels which also means it's best to use dedicated m 4/3 lenses as well. It pays to get as close as possible rather than crop but some mix of the 2 seems to be the best option because at 1:1 there isn't a lot of working distance in front of the lens. I reckon circa 80mm at 1:1 which actually isn't bad for a 60mm lens. Take Rita's shot from around 300mm which I what I would use and the dof drops off a lot to 2mm and I think she will find she has to use AF.
At that distance the DOF calculator reckons the F8, F11 doesn't really make any difference F14 ups it to 4mm. In real terms I reckon the figures it gives are lower than what will be obtained in practice.
