Showing posts with label flower images. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flower images. Show all posts

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Abstract

The photo above was very amenable to tight cropping - I especially love how the tiny little hole in the petal is placed.

Friday, September 17, 2010

Botanical Bookends


Our property is packed with Cyclamen in the spring and in the late summer/early fall - when the rain returns. Since our dry season has been over for the last two weeks, the fall cyclamen have been popping up everywhere.


Therefore, they "bookend" my most active gardening phase of the year - arriving in the spring when I'm starting seeds in the greenhouse - and popping up again at the cusp of summer and fall.


Groups of Cyclamen always look, to me, like a group of people standing around, or a committee gathered for some special purpose. Look at the photo above - the flower in the middle looks like the one person in the "crowd" that noticed I was taking their picture - and he's looking at me as if to say: "who are you and what business do you have taking my photo?"

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Dragon Quest


Snapdragon quest, that is. This year's snapdragons were spectacular. These images are the best I've shot so far.


Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Summer's Blue Skies

The image above features one of our Japanese anemone flowers against an idealized summer blue sky - with a little help from Photoshop. The original image had too much distraction in the background - the blue sky allows the flower to show itself off a little bit.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Variegated Cyclamen

In the early spring our front yard is blessed with a carpet of fuchsia/pink and white cyclamen flowers. Last year, I spent hours and hours photographing them to obtain a small batch of photos I was very pleased with. Thus, I thought I was pretty on top of the cyclamen population.

Imagine my surprise when I found this speckled, purple and white specimen behind our garbage can. It was the day before garbage pick-up, and I was in the process of cramming all the yard waste I could into the can when I saw this one tiny flower.

A Google search of "variegated cyclamen" yielded some very good examples, but nothing quite like this flower. A genetic freak, perhaps?

Monday, August 9, 2010

Nearly Neutral


The gray August day inspired these nearly neutral photos. The white flower has a nice soft glow, as opposed to the harsh glare I'd get on a sunny day.

The dead leaf was found hanging on the side of a tree that had recently been scorched by fire - it is fair to say this is a "crime scene photo". Our neighbors insist on burning copious amounts of yard waste in their back yard - despite the danger inherent in doing so during the usually dry summer and in violation of city law. Our neighbor's behavior has inspired The Boyfriend to take up the mantle of "Neighborhood Asshole" - a role that had recently been played by our next door neighbor until his untimely death by cancer. Considering our neighborhood is a tinderbox of dry pine needles...I can't say that I blame him. Needless to say, I took some more comprehensive "crime scene" photos.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Hibiscus Time!


This post features images of the first Hibiscus bloom of 2010. I have never seen this plant looking so good and, more importantly, aphid free! This plant, which I inherited with the greenhouse, had proven to be an irresistible aphid magnet. I must have sprayed the thing with soapy water solution dozens of times last year. This is the type of situation that has me reaching for systemic chemical pesticides, especially in January or February, when I begin to stock the greenhouse with young seedlings. I WILL wield chemicals when it comes to my ornamental plants. Aphids on a mature, large plant is one thing; its another thing entirely when it comes to young seedlings. You might as well invite Dracula to spend the night in a hospital nursery so he can suck the blood out of newborns.


Last year, I went so far as to put it outside overnight in winter to kill the buggers; a part of me wanted to leave it there to die, but The Boyfriend convinced me to bring it back into the warmth of the greenhouse the next day. I guess I'm a heartless Flora-Bitch at times. In January of this year, in a preemptive, desperate measure, I cut every shred of green off this plant in an attempt to starve the aphids during the crucial "many seedlings" phase of late winter. After all, they won't attack a plant devoid of juicy green growth. I savagely reduced it to a mere stick sitting in a pot of dirt. "Show me what you've got" I said to The Stick. "Prove to me you are worth the trouble." And show me it did - the plant is lush, lush, lush - and covered in flower buds waiting to pop. Its a survivor!

I'd have a third photo here if Blogger hadn't decided to stop uploading my images. Bad Blogger!

Friday, July 23, 2010

Lightbox Treatment

Shirley Poppy flowers rest on slim, delicate stems - making them sway in the breeze. Which in turn results in photos that are a little too blurry. Since I wanted to cut several down for a bouquet, I decided to try out the lightbox and experiment with artificial light.

The two photos posted here are the best of the batch - I love how white and clean the light is. I used the "vibrant" color setting on the camera, and did some very simple photo editing using Microsoft Photo Editor to achieve a "painterly" effect (Photoshop will be entering my life soon - I have a feeling I'll be talking about my life in terms of "pre-Photoshop" or "post-Photoshop" once I open that Pandora's box). Bringing plant life into the house to photograph in the lightbox has been in the back of my mind for a while, and this is the first time I have done it. I am thrilled with the results, and am looking forward to dragging all manner of plant materials into the house this winter for the lightbox treatment.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Better Off Dead


Some plants are better off dead, or nearly so, in that they look much more interesting that way. I am a big fan of the Poinsettia plant - not in December, but weeks later - maybe March. By that time, the owner has long since stopped watering it and the leaves have curled up into fascinating shapes far more interesting than the original live plant.


I feel the same way about the common type of Day Lilly (Hemerocallis) - I guess I have seen one too many run of the mill orange and yellow specimens. The Day Lilly pictured here (they came with the house) is from my front yard. Why do I have them at all? They came with the house. With a little evening back-lighting and Death breathing down its neck, the common orange Day Lilly is transformed into "botanical stained glass". I had a tough time getting the entire image in sharp focus, but decided the vibrant colors mitigated that shortcoming, and made them worth showing off.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Peak Groundcover Performance

Above: Sedum spurium (aka "John Creech Sedum") flower

Ground cover plants continue to provide interest and amazement as the summer wears on. If it was not for my love of close-up images, I may have never 'seen' these flowers and appreciated them as much as I do now.

Above: Sempervivum tectorum (aka "Hens and Chicks") flower

You have to admit that even the so-common-as-to-be-boring "Hens and Chicks" produces a beautiful, complex flower.

Above: Close up of Sempervivum tectorum flower

Finally, pictured below is the flower dominating our landscape at the moment, the ubiquitous Sedum album, "Chubby Fingers".

Above: Sedum album (aka "Chubby Fingers") flower

Chubby Fingers is my personal nemesis. Due to the sheer volume of this plant found on the property, I think it is most likely to broach the perimeter of the house, and take root on our indoor welcome mat - I am sure there is enough dirt there for this tough plant to take hold. If only there were some good recipes for the stuff...

Monday, July 19, 2010

Too Much of a Good Thing (Sun)


I loathe taking plant photos on brilliant, sunny days. The colors are washed out and there is glare everywhere. Despite the sunny weather, I was determined to get some flowers photographed today - I needed to cleanse my photographic "palate" after spending two days photographing aircraft at the Joint Base Lewis-McChord Air Expo 2010. While I was able to take some great shots of the static displays, photographing plants doesn't prepare one for photographing jets. I'll leave that to the folks with foot long telephoto, wide angle lenses! Just try and find a fighter jet in a clear blue sky without one - by the time you've located it - its gone.

The Shirley Poppies pictured here were photographed from underneath on a brilliant, sunny day - makes you want to stretch for the sun!

Monday, July 12, 2010

Volunteers and Shirley Poppies

Above: Reliable volunteer snapdragon

Like many gardeners, my potting soil gets recycled year after year. It must be full of old flower seeds from prior years of seed starting - you never know what might pop up. Last year, some old snapdragon seeds germinated in a pot I was ignoring. I continued to ignore the pot throughout the summer, as the plants I had planned take up enough of my time. I watered it once in a while, but it displayed the kind of "will to live" I like to see in a plant - the ability to thrive just in case I forget it exists for a few days.

Above: Reliable volunteer snapdragon aping Georgia O'Keefe

Today's photos feature the first volunteer snapdragon of 2010; oddly, the snapdragons I planted, on purpose, and have fussed over, have yet to bloom.

Above: A decidedly non-volunteer Shirley Poppy - the first of 2010

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Lemons in Lakewood?

Above: flowers on my Allen Eureka Lemon (aka Meyer Lemon) tree

Due to my unemployed status, I have not done much impulse shopping at the nursery this year. However, I just had to have one of the Meyer Lemon trees for sale at Lowe's for $15. When I first spied them, I thought "now who the hell is going to grow a citrus tree in the Puget Sound? The only people able to do that are folks with a greenhouse. Wait - that's me."

Above: flowers on my Allen Eureka Lemon (aka Meyer Lemon) tree

I planted the tree in the dirt strip in the greenhouse, where I promised it all the warmth that it needed, but cautioned it that sun might be lacking. Expecting little, I have been watching it flourish in amazement. The scent of the flowers is a welcome addition to the greenhouse, and there has been new leaf growth since I put it in the ground. Could it be possible we'll see Lemons in Lakewood?

Friday, July 9, 2010

Ninety-Five Degrees? No Problem.

Above: flower from a Sedum reflexum, also known as Jenny's Stonecrop (my best guess based on internet research), showing no signs of wilt in 95 degree weather.

Our front yard includes a plethora of incredibly tough, nearly indestructible flowering ground covers - including several types of Sedum. We have so much Sedum on our property, I expect to wake up one morning to find it has invaded the house. Summer is finally here in the Puget Sound region, and July 8 brought high temps between 93-95 degrees, along with the annual drought season. Despite copious watering via hose and irrigation system, most plants in the vegetable/flower garden are wilting in the heat. As the photo above illustrates - 90-plus Fahrenheit is no problem for this Sedum flower which, along with other blooming groundcovers, provides much-needed color after the spring flowers are long gone. Good thing, because it will be a cold day in hell before I start watering the extensive front yard! Go Sedum!

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Thankful For The Green

Another gray, drizzly summer day in the south end of Puget Sound. If we are lucky, we'll hit 68 degrees today. Having lived here for 20+ years, I should be used to it, along with the effort it takes to live as if the sun was out. Obviously - you can't have the lush green without the abundance of rain. Maybe I'm extra peeved because I recently spent countless hours trying to re-install an irrigation system in the garden - only to find that the garden won't need water for days. You just have to suck it up and be "Thankful for the Green".

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

One More Oriental Poppy...

Before the Shirley Poppies bloom - and the latest Flower Photography Obsession (hereafter known as "FPO") begins. I love the shadows cast by the flower's stamens - but I would have liked to see more contrast and detail in the yellow stigma.

Friday, June 25, 2010

Poppy Frenzy

As my flowers bloom throughout the year, I will become obsessed with one specific flower and will photograph it over and over until I have images I am satisfied with. At the present time its all about poppies. My light pink poppy was the first to bloom - only to break off right below the flower - pissing me off to no end - what the hell can you do with a decapitated poppy? Then it dawned on me to pose it with one of the many, many plants in our yard. I present to you: The Decapitated Poppy That Got Around.

First stop - the pot of Thyme

Second stop - the dark red Japanese Maple

On to the hostas

Quiet repose on some mossy rocks

Finally, sitting in the grass pondering what it all means