Thanks John and Geoff. Nice captures, hope more post.
Two photos of a native mock orange. These fruit are small, around 10mm long.
056A7120 by tonyw36, on Flickr
056A7113(2) by tonyw36, on Flickr
If you want C&C...it would be better to post only one or two images at a time.![]()
I took this two weeks ago
uploadfromtaptalk1404012690056.jpg
Blasted Cactus
I am taking up more than my share of space on this thread.
The prickly pear is a noxious week in Australia and in earlier years caused tremendous damage. The cactoblastis moth was introduced and proved successful in controlling the prickly pear. This is a before and after picture in one. the remnant structure of the cactus is interesting.
056A8177(2) by tonyw36, on Flickr
Real life flower photography can be problematic with lighting and complicated backgrounds, as Randy mentioned.
I usually look around in front and behind my subject to remove anything obvious, but too often still miss something. And even then, getting the best angle still results in a far from ideal background.
Recently, I tried photographing some grasses for identification purposes; and got 90% failures!
Here are a couple of alternative but tricky flowers from the same day.
The small flowered Enchanters Nightshade. A delicate looking plant - until it gets in your garden!
And believe it or not, this one is actually an orchid. Twayblade.
The flowers are less than 10 mm long; and it was growing in deep shade with a fresh wind blowing. Flash just produced excessive hot spots so the only hope was a long exposure on a tripod, but even then wind rock blurred all the other shots! And this one survivor is still far from perfect.
Geoff- I have found that my camera bag makes a nice background
I also play with picking up various colors of fabric to cover distracting backgrounds. It will likely work with macro shots.
I also am getting into 17mm shots of flowers, figuring that I may as well include the background as a functional element of the image
Thank you Bnnrcn , I got a couple of good shots that day in the garden but this one was one of my favorites.
Randy, I do use printed backdrops when working indoors, but found them difficult to get looking natural in outdoor work; and it took a lot of messing around. I never had much success with using a camera bag either. But I use a much bigger backpack now so I will give it a try if I can get the distance right so nothing shows from the bag.
Tried shooting the last Flag Iris of the year today. In a pond and I tried to get a sunless angle to prevent the yellows from blowing. But it isn't quite what I wanted, although maybe another edit will work better. I've tried this scene several times without being really happy with the results.
Getting a variety of them from a place like http://www.joann.com/fabric/ can produce a variety of choices.![]()