May 26
Blooming
Amazing. I have waited and waited… and now it’s finally here. The flower season. In the past weeks I’ve gotten in the occasional flower shot, but the floodgates really opened today. I’ve been walking around with camera in hand most of the day, and finished with a car ride to the lake and got my first landscape shot since the winter. In floral terms, I’ve shot marsh marigold (Caltha palustris), dwarf marsh violet (Viola epipsila), wood sorrel (Oxalis acetosella), wood forget-me-not (Myosotis sylvatica), wood anemone (Anemone nemorosa), apple flower, wild pansy (Viola tricolor) and then a yellow flower I haven’t been able to ID yet (help appreciated, see below). And I also got shots of a daffodil but I deleted them, and a backlit maple leaf which I didn’t delete, bringing the total of today’s species to ten. If this doesn’t look like summer, then I don’t know what!Oh what to do tomorrow. I know a spot where the lily of the valley have already started blooming (!) and common and heath dog violets are forming blue pillows on the forest floor. There are cowslip on every lawn (except mine) but I have a secured a visit to someone’s garden to shoot them, only it will take a few days until they are fully grown. I really fancy taking a shot at marsh violets, which will be tricky because they are so small and just disappear in the grass while achieving sufficient DOF is a challenge of its own. And that unidentified flower will get some morning sun… and I want to perfect my backlit maple leaf shot… and I definitely need some good pictures of the forget-me-nots. Looks like another busy day tomorrow!




That 4th flower just might be some type of dahlia.
And, it certainly is my favorite of the images you have shown here in this post.
The comp, the way you handled your depth, the lighting, the details, … very nice!
Agree with Michael about the id, but would be nice to see the whole thing.
Very nice work with the viola. With marsh marigold and wood anemone you did excellent job! I tried to shoot both of those species but without success. -Perhaps I should try this kind of approach, because I find it very difficult to find photogenic enough individual :/ And if I find, the BG sucks..
The problem with marsh marigold is that they seem to go “old” very quickly, so the best way to find good specimens is to just simply visit the place often to catch some which are in prime condition. The earlier in the spring you find them, the better - before the background clutter grows too high.