And a Few More Flowers

I know flower posts have been submitted here before and I surely have nothing original to offer but they do make a versatile subject, allowing an appreciation of colour, texture, form and placement. These were all taken inside the Walled Garden at the stunning Wimpole Estate in Cambridgeshire just before my Eastern/Central/Somewhere In Europe trip. The vivid specimens are a fitting testament to the diligence and vision of the team of gardeners there who braved the heat to maintain the beautiful flowerbeds.

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The images can also be a tribute (at least in my humble opinion) to the macro lens I used to shoot them, the Olympus 60mm f/2.8. A dinky little number which, unlike most hefty macro lenses, is small enough to fit into my coffee mug (the sunglasses are meant to give scale to the mug – after all it could be any size really, couldn’t it?).

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Yes, a full frame sensor will give a shallower depth of field than the micro four thirds sensor (far from a necessity for macro work) of my E-M5 but the bokeh on this thing is pretty good and I imagine it would double up as a decent portrait lens for this format too. Most macro lenses that I have historically used with my old DSLRs have also been slow to focus, but this little guy is reasonably quick and sharp and thus I have always included it in my light travel kit as a mini-telephoto lens. Not to oversell it but it’s great to walk around (especially in hot weather) with a lens and camera so light I can barely feel them.

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Right, enough about gear (sorry!) and back to the flowers. I don’t have a green thumb but I love beautiful gardens and can certainly appreciate the effort that goes into them. Flowers are always an enjoyable photographic challenge that offers almost unlimited compositional potential.

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One can focus solely on details, turning tiny petals or stamens into an entire landscape upon which the eye can travel.

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Or it may simply be the way they stand in the light, the sunlight glowing gently through their translucent petals.

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Maybe it’s their texture and the patterns that define their individuality, reminding us that we in the animal kingdom are not so unique in exhibiting so much variety.

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Your composition may consider how a flower fits against the background of its brethren or surroundings; it does not always have to be isolated.

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Of course flowers do not have to be shot from side on or above. Try shooting them from underneath (it helps if you have a flip-out touchscreen – I rarely use a viewfinder anymore), or turn the camera so that your frame lines up with the direction of the flower.

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One of the bonuses of flowers is that they attract all kinds of beautiful creatures amongst their midst.

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Ultimately, it may simply be about making a straightforward portrait of a flower.

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These were all processed in Lightroom, again to my personal taste and style, mainly contrast and some selective dodging and burning. And as much as I love vivid colour I actually had to de-saturate many of these from their original appearance. Shot handheld using the touchscreen to focus where I wanted, mainly between f/2.8 and f/4 in aperture priority at ISO 200 with the camera choosing the shutter speed.

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Well, that’s me. Now it’s your turn to go out and shoot some flowers and show me how it’s really done. Best of luck!

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