Passiflora aurantiaca
This species has a slightly misleading name, as as only the backs of the sepals have much orange colour. I posted some images just after I purchased it, when it had been trained in a tight spiral.
At that time, I was unsure if I would get more flowers this year, it having flowered earlier than the normal season, which is now. Now that it is growing vigorously up an old apple tree, it is producing lots of flowers. Of course, it is attaching its tendrils to twigs, some of which I have avoided, other I have cloned out.
I usually use f16 or macro subjects. This time I have tried some shots at f22 and have found no significant diffraction blur.
EM-1(manual mode), Kiron 105, twin flash, hand-held.
The stereo is crosseye.
Harold




At that time, I was unsure if I would get more flowers this year, it having flowered earlier than the normal season, which is now. Now that it is growing vigorously up an old apple tree, it is producing lots of flowers. Of course, it is attaching its tendrils to twigs, some of which I have avoided, other I have cloned out.
I usually use f16 or macro subjects. This time I have tried some shots at f22 and have found no significant diffraction blur.
EM-1(manual mode), Kiron 105, twin flash, hand-held.
The stereo is crosseye.
Harold





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