Under the canopy, lurking in the undergrowth …
Don’t touch!

Submitted as part of Jude’s Macros in the Garden April challenge. You can find details here: https://smallbluegreenflowers.wordpress.com/
Under the canopy, lurking in the undergrowth …
Don’t touch!

Submitted as part of Jude’s Macros in the Garden April challenge. You can find details here: https://smallbluegreenflowers.wordpress.com/
I moved and the plant moved, we were out of time.
Blurry/Hazy.
Neither of us composed.
And yet, here it is, and here I am.
Both of us wearing our imperfections perfectly.

Autumn is upon us.

‘The earth laughs in flowers’ said Ralph Waldo Emerson some time ago.
Does it still?

Texture + Colour + Shape = Beauty

There is a ‘prettyish kind of a little wilderness on one side of [the city]’. It’s a most unexpected sight, but really quite delightful.

With thanks to Jane Austen for the inspiration.
Walking through a rainforest over Easter was good for my soul.
So was capturing this moment of beauty.

I came across Lily quite by accident, and I knew from the moment I saw her that I wanted to photograph her.
And so I did.

Hair and make up: Missie Villamor. You can find Missie on Instragram @missievillamor
The flower’s head droops.
Its petals weighty
with age
and fragile beauty.
Captured.
Its age
and fragile beauty
linger.

This is the final in my seven-day series of posts featuring flowers.
I love taking photos of flowers. There are challenges to photographing flowers. I think carefully about the story I want to tell through the image – usually one of fragility or subtlety or beauty; how much of the flower I want to capture; the angle I will shoot at (eye-level with the camera, or from on-high, or perhaps down low, or from the back …); the part of the flower to focus on; how to shade/light the flower to accentuate its core characteristics … and much (much) more.
The challenges, as well as the technical elements and the processing decisions, keep it interesting for me.
I hope this little series has allowed you to see flowers anew – in all their fragile, subtle beauty. Perhaps it has also inspired you to get your camera out, seek out a flower or two, and make some technical and aesthetic decisions of your own.
If it has, please feel free to share your images with me – I love to see how others interpret/represent the flowers around them.
We emerge from the cool of the rainforest to the dusty heat of a different type of Australian landscape. Lizards stretch full length on the rocks above the waterfall and soak up the sun.
And paper daisies lift their heads and spread their warmth.
