Early Spring
I took so many pictures of flowers last week that I'm still developing the RAW files. I didn't have time to get this first one in the challenge, but I'll show it here. If you have some suggestions, I'd appreciate them. I think I'd like to frame one of the triptychs for my hallway.
"A wise man will make more opportunities than he finds." - Francis Bacon
Susan Appel Photography My Blog
Susan Appel Photography My Blog
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as far as the triptych though, the last one seems a little too dark to flow with the rest of them.
Keep in mind, i'm still learning here myself and this is just what I see.
Keep up the awesome work though,
Steven
MM Portfolio
Canon 30D | Canon 50mm f/1.8 | Tamron 28-75mm f/2.8 | Canon Speedlite 580ex
These were all shot with my Olympus c5050z on macro setting, in the house, near a window. I used a dark green, vellux blanket as a backdrop. For the daisy, I used a flashlight from below to highlight the petals.
The rosebud setting was ISO 125, f2.0 1/25 sec., 11.9mm (I don't know how to convert to 35mm equivelent. My lens goes from 7.1 to 21.3mm which they say is equivelent to 35 to 105mm.) This was pretty underexposed and I brought it up in the RAW development. I wanted to make sure I didn't overexpose the yellow and I wanted the background very dark.
The fully open rose setting was: ISO 125, f2.3, 1/30 sec., 13.8mm
The daisy setting was: ISO 125, f2.6, 1/25 sec., 21.3mm.
The shadows are dark on the daisy, but I really liked the bright light on the petals.
Here is a quick snapshot of my nectarine tree that I took on Jan 20. Just in case you folks on the east coast don't believe we have blossoms out here in California.
Susan Appel Photography My Blog
Susan Appel Photography My Blog
Sam
Susan Appel Photography My Blog
Take the first photo, and flip it so it faces to the left. Remove the daisy and repace with the fliped version. You would then have the center flower flanked by flowers looking inward, and the fantastic color would be maintained.
Sam