sunrise.01.10.20
sunset.01.10.19
sunset.01.11.19
Pictures for Pam, Day 66: Nature's Miniature Chris…
Pictures for Pam, Day 67: Macro Monday: Tiny Frost…
sunrise-01.15.19
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Pictures for Pam, Day 68: Sunrise and Skies
Pictures for Pam, Day 69: Lovely Light on Lemon
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morning-fog2.01.14.19
cloudy-skies-at-gate
Pictures for Pam, Day 70: HFF: Flowers & Fence
Pictures for Pam, Day 71: Birch Tree Catkins
Pictures for Pam, Day 72: Sweet Pea Shrub
Pictures for Pam, Day 73: Stream Abstract
Pictures for Pam, Day 74: Macro Monday: Perfume Bo…
Pictures for Pam, Day 75: Tangled Grass
Pictures for Pam, Day 76: Sweet Gum
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Pictures for Pam, Day 77: HFF: Mottled Pair
Pictures for Pam, Day 64: Fern Tips
Pictures for Pam, Day 63: Happy Fence Friday!
foggy-valley-pano
sunrise.01.10.19
Pictures for Pam, Day 62: Can You Guess?
sunrise.01.08.19.02
sunrise.01.08.19
Pictures for Pam, Day 61: Strawberry Tree Berries
Pictures for Pam, Day 60: Macro Monday: New Year's…
Pictures for Pam, Day 59: Marin Mushrooms
Pictures for Pam, Day 58: Wisteria Leaves
Pictures for Pam, Day 57: Sepia Starbursts
Pictures for Pam, Day 56: HFF: Golden Gate Bridge
Pictures for Pam, Day 55: Pair of Mushrooms
Pictures for Pam, Day 54: Pink Passion Dahlia
Pictures for Pam, Day 53: Happy New Year!
Pictures for Pam, Day 52: Conifer Cones
Pictures for Pam, Day 51: Golden Gate Bridge
Pictures for Pam, Day 50: Bee on Sunflower
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tree-in-foggy-meadow
Pictures for Pam, Day 49: HFF: Cyprus Forest
See also...
" Amazing Nature - Einmalige Natur - La nature unique - La natura unica "
" Amazing Nature - Einmalige Natur - La nature unique - La natura unica "
BLEUNIENN / FLOWER in memoriam to Mahuphidos **********
BLEUNIENN / FLOWER in memoriam to Mahuphidos **********
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Pictures for Pam, Day 65: Cuphea Blossom


(+4 insets!) (please view large!)
I am having so much fun posting pictures from our trip down to San Anselmo to visit my brother Brian and his wife Nathalie. Every day I get to work on a few more images and it's wonderful to wander through the photos and decide which one(s) to post today. As I look through them, I am reminded of what was going through my mind when I took the pictures.
Today's choice was growing on a bush on Nathalie's patio. These flowers are very small but so bright and pretty that you can't help noticing them. When standing away from them, they aren't all that distinctive, but when you crouch down and take a good look, why…"THEY HAVE PURPLE EARS!!" I couldn't help exclaiming in glee and beamed at the lovely little blossoms.
These flowers are also an extremely challenging prospect for a macro photographer. There's a reason I chose the side view as my main image: it's completely in focus. This type of flower, with its long tube shape and sort of a flat face, makes it easy to show excellent detail of the front part of the blossom. But if you're close to the flower, good luck on getting the whole tube in focus! For example, one of my insets is a face-on view and my aperture was set to 22. The back is out of focus! Not intended! *cry*
One solution to get crisp focus is to back up a bit and get another aperture set. If you really want to be sure, you'll have to back up a bit more and get another set. (Aperture set: an identical picture of a subject taken at each aperture through a range, or one picture per several apertures through a range) However, by backing up you run the risk of a picture that cannot be cropped as tightly as you want if you back up too far. Also, the background is also going to lose that lovely bokeh you're after. Likewise, the higher the aperture number, the sharper the background is going to be. Basically, one needs to experiment a lot and fill your camera card in the process. Personally, there's only so many pictures I want to look through so I crossed my fingers when I took my dozen or so attempts. I didn't nail the focus for the whole flower at either an angle or head on, but I did get entire crispness for the side view so I'm happy. Providing a couple of extra pictures shows this entire, gorgeous flower and thus, a successful presentation for all of you to enjoy! :)
(I'm also including a couple of insets of yesterday's sunrise and the night before's sunset!)
Pam, I wouldn't be surprised if you had these flowers growing in your garden. Then again, they can be hard to get established so maybe not? They are deer-resistant though! They are also fabulous for attracting insects and hummingbirds. It would be so nice to have them here but I refuse to have another garden due to our low amount of water and fighting with the ground squirrels. I hope you have had a nice day my dear! :)
Explored on 1/13/19, highest placement, #2.
I am having so much fun posting pictures from our trip down to San Anselmo to visit my brother Brian and his wife Nathalie. Every day I get to work on a few more images and it's wonderful to wander through the photos and decide which one(s) to post today. As I look through them, I am reminded of what was going through my mind when I took the pictures.
Today's choice was growing on a bush on Nathalie's patio. These flowers are very small but so bright and pretty that you can't help noticing them. When standing away from them, they aren't all that distinctive, but when you crouch down and take a good look, why…"THEY HAVE PURPLE EARS!!" I couldn't help exclaiming in glee and beamed at the lovely little blossoms.
These flowers are also an extremely challenging prospect for a macro photographer. There's a reason I chose the side view as my main image: it's completely in focus. This type of flower, with its long tube shape and sort of a flat face, makes it easy to show excellent detail of the front part of the blossom. But if you're close to the flower, good luck on getting the whole tube in focus! For example, one of my insets is a face-on view and my aperture was set to 22. The back is out of focus! Not intended! *cry*
One solution to get crisp focus is to back up a bit and get another aperture set. If you really want to be sure, you'll have to back up a bit more and get another set. (Aperture set: an identical picture of a subject taken at each aperture through a range, or one picture per several apertures through a range) However, by backing up you run the risk of a picture that cannot be cropped as tightly as you want if you back up too far. Also, the background is also going to lose that lovely bokeh you're after. Likewise, the higher the aperture number, the sharper the background is going to be. Basically, one needs to experiment a lot and fill your camera card in the process. Personally, there's only so many pictures I want to look through so I crossed my fingers when I took my dozen or so attempts. I didn't nail the focus for the whole flower at either an angle or head on, but I did get entire crispness for the side view so I'm happy. Providing a couple of extra pictures shows this entire, gorgeous flower and thus, a successful presentation for all of you to enjoy! :)
(I'm also including a couple of insets of yesterday's sunrise and the night before's sunset!)
Pam, I wouldn't be surprised if you had these flowers growing in your garden. Then again, they can be hard to get established so maybe not? They are deer-resistant though! They are also fabulous for attracting insects and hummingbirds. It would be so nice to have them here but I refuse to have another garden due to our low amount of water and fighting with the ground squirrels. I hope you have had a nice day my dear! :)
Explored on 1/13/19, highest placement, #2.
, Marco F. Delminho, Trudy Tuinstra, Au Cœur... diagonalhorizon and 51 other people have particularly liked this photo
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Love the sunrise and sunset photos too. Stunningly beautiful!
Hope you have a lovely day, Janet.
I NEED ANYTHING THAT CAN SURVIVE CONSTANT GOPHER ATTACKS ! WE HAVE MANY DEER AND THEY ARE NO PROBLEM AT ALL !
A wonderful picture of a flower which I have never seen before.
From the description you have posted, your technical skill in creating this picture is so plain for us all to see. You had thought it out, and executed it perfectly. I like the result a lot!!
Best Wishes
Peter
Gracias Janet !!!
I also like the images of the flower in your PiPs...........I think they're pretty much perfectly sharp exactly where they need to be and the out of focus areas don't worry me at all.
I think that the only time you need to worry about getting the entire thing in focus is if you're taking photos for a technical article, or for forensic examination and suchlike!
Oh, nearly forgot.............two cracking landscape images too. I particularly like the last PiP with the silhouetted foreground. Excellent..!!
My camera actually has a feature which does the focus stacking (as described by Ron Hanko above) in camera..........but I've never got round to using it :-))
Wonderful pictures, Janet!!
Best wishes
Füsun
Andy Rodker club has addedAnd this time I can't see any at all! Have you airbrushed them out, Janet? I need help with this please. Where are they? :o(
très simple mais très belle , j'vais déjà une fois photographié cette fleur
mais pas aussi bien
bonne semaine Janet
I like also the PiPs.
impressively beautiful
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