Posted in Photography

007

 

The flower’s head droops.

Its petals weighty

with age

and fragile beauty.

 

Captured.

Its age

and fragile beauty

linger.

 

They're always in the process of letting go
They’re always in the process of letting go

 

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.

Posted in Photography

005

Imagine a morning.

The sky is blue and wide

and the breeze is wistful

and perfumed.

We wander under the canopy of the rainforest,

And then out into the light.

And flowers.

What a beauty - so subtle yet pointy
To me it looks like it’s bursting 

 

Posted in Photography

004

 

It’s a part of a flower that often remains unseen.

We are captured by the outer, showy petals
where the colour is.

But the insides are worthy of our focus too.

The inside of a rose has its own beauty
The inside of a rose has its own beauty