flowers

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What would you do with a cliche?

Saturday, June 12th, 2010

Flower pics. Looking at ‘em close. Sure is purty! But heck yeah, quite the cliche.

Little blue (bell-shaped) flowers

Little blue (bell-shaped) flowers

So, what would you do with this? It’s just not working for me…

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By the Docks in Juneau

Friday, September 11th, 2009

From our Alaskan Cruise in August 2009:

By the docks in Juneau

By the docks in Juneau

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Pink flowers at the zoo

Sunday, July 5th, 2009

One more photo, a study in not blowing out the highlights.  This was about as perfectly exposed as could be for the lighting.  Even though our summers are short, folks really work hard at making them bright & beautiful!

Pink flowers at the Alaska Zoo

Pink flowers at the Alaska Zoo

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Pink flowers in the sun

Friday, July 3rd, 2009

Flowers in the sun: just an up-close pic of the lilacs growing in our front yard…

Pink flowers in the sun

Pink flowers in the sun.

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Overpowering the noontime sun

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

Well, not so impressive in Anchorage – not on an overcast day. Still, there’s a semi-decent impression:

Flowers, strobist-style

Flowers, strobist-style

The strangeness of the image is due to using flash to overpower the ambient light. More on the tech side tomorrow.  Some resurrection of light in photoshop, too…

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Photographic backgrounds, another example

Thursday, June 11th, 2009
Looking up - a side view of flowers

Looking up - a side view of flowers

To the right you’ll see another example of the concept I mentioned yesterday. I was trying to do three things, which I acheived with moderate success: capture complex flowers from a different angle, throw something of interest into the background, and give an impression of the flowers reaching up to the sun.

I partially succeeded – the angle is somewhat unusual, and I did get a nice light-to-dark effect going with the falling of light on the grass.  I only came close to the concept of “reaching to the sun.”

To do this, I took a look at the background, and worked around the sides until I found an angle that interested me.  If I were to do this again, I’d probably go further away, zoom a little more, and angle the flowers to be in the lighter part of the background.  Or maybe the opposite – who knows?

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Backgrounds in photographs

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009
Gold on a sea of Green - a picture from a walk I took with my daughter

Gold on a sea of Green - a picture from a walk I took with my daughter

A wise man once told me that the single best think you can do for your subjects is to control the background.  Ever since then, I’ve been working on controlling that background, to either offset or compliment the subject in a photo.

This is a complete lie.  The man who said that was Moose Petersen, and he was telling an entire class at last year’s photo safari at photoshop world.  And he said it approximately 15 minutes before I asked the question about snow that would haunt me for the next six months.  But I’ve already gone there.

No, he was saying that, from his perspective, the number one thing he did to improve his pictures was to make sure the background fit the image.  I’m barely understanding what he meant, but I’m starting to understand.

The photo to the right: there is a small bed of flowers up the road.  They’re fairly young right now, not fully opened.  Quite beautiful, but hard to photograph.  From above, you get flat light and not a terribly interesting image.  From the side, it’s a level sea of flowers.  From each angle, things kinda start looking… weird.

What you see here was a deliberate placement of the blurred background around the main (sharp) flower: each flower is separate, but only one stands out.  That one is taller than the rest.

A counter, example: the same flower, from a different angle:

Gold on Black, a different angle to the same flower

Gold on Black, a different angle to the same flower

The top flower is the exact same one as before, only from a different angle.  The background is in shadow, whereas the light is on the flowers.  This is technically a strobist technique, but by dropping exposure by 1-2 stops, I was able to get the greens in the background down to nearly black.  A slight tweak of curves in photoshop, and it’s almost flat black.

Again, it’s about controlling the background.

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