Tips to Photographing Flowers
Legacy signals
Legacy popularity: 1,536 legacy views
This is a great month to capture colorful flowers. Here are some quick tips to remember when you do.
Camera tricks:
- Use a shallow depth of field (get your f-stop or aperture set to the lowest number you can.) This gives you a sea of color while making one flower pop out.
- Try a slow shutter speed, 1/30th, 15th or even 3 seconds, on a windy or breezy day. This creates a wonderfully pastel emotional image.
- Get close in, macro if you can. You will see unique detail rarely seen that will delight the viewer, especially if you print it very large.
- Bring along some tools – reflector cards to open up shadows, large cards to act as wind block. You can bring along a colored card or even a photo of a background to put behind the flower, have the background go out of focus for a believable transition.
- Set your file size to as large as you can for prints or cropping options.
Composition tricks:
- Get down low, “eye” level with the flower; unique angles always make flower shots interesting.
- Look for lines and shapes, like diagonals, s shaped curves to give the image a flow. Use them as foreground elements to frame your main subject.
- Photograph them really early in the morning or just as the sun goes down for rich soft light on them.
- Spray water on them for that morning dew look.
- Always place your “key” flower into the rule of thirds grid for most impact. Work with depth of field to isolate or find one that is a different color than the rest. Find one that is somehow different from its surroundings.
Unique uses:
- Use them as background elements to float smaller images on top off.
- Create a larger image and put real flowers in front of them.
- Use them on your timeline photo in Facebook.
- They can become texture overlays to your portrait photographs.
- Create your own greeting cards with them.
- Add inspirational copy to them then print or post them to mentally frame your day.
That old phrase, “stop and smell the roses” could also have you stopping to photo the flowers. They and their beauty don’t last long but a photograph will enrich your life with their beauty forever.
Article author
About the Author
Mark Laurie is a Master Photographer, international speaker, author and studio mentor. He teaches extensively in England and Canada. His Revealing Venus Nude & Glamour Photography Workshop is run in Italy. Mark has published 7 books. You can find information on his books, photography, and training at www.InnerSpiritPhoto.com. He is on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/innerspiritphoto
Further reading
Further Reading
Article
Intuitive Process Painting As A Spiritual Practice
People paint for a lot of different reasons. To relax, to express themselves , to create beauty and meaning, to make money, because they have a passion to create, to gain approval, to stay sane, to make sense of the world, to play and have fun. All of the above are wonderful and valid ...
Related piece
Article
The Creative Process, How And Why It Works
Creativity is a subtle and magnificent dance between the rational and the intuitive, between the left and right parts of the brains, between technique and imagination. Both partners in this dance are absolutely necessary and are needed in equal proportion, which means that imagination is not more important than technique and visa versa. If you only live in the imagination, you will never get organized, you will never complete your story. However, if you start from the rational, linear, organizational part of the process, ( ie. Gotta have the perfect opening sentence and first paragraph...
Related piece
Article
The Happy Ending - Love Conquers All Or Thoughts On Fiction Writing After Dialoguing With My Dog
Recently, I was considering the question of peace, which doesn't happen often while writing fiction. There's all that drama, love, hate, desire, envy and so on. Peace, with any luck, comes at the end of the novel. I was considering this aimlessly as I lay with my head on Phoebe's warm flank. Phoebe, being the sensitive, intuitive creature she is, immediately tuned into my musings and suggested we consider the question of love instead, which she quite rightly observed was a precursor to true peace.
Related piece
Article
How To Make A Bad Kid Good Again: The Story of Michael, Peter & Harry The Cat
It is sometimes said that the truth should never be allowed to get in the way of a good story. Sometimes, however, it is the true events that turn out to be the stories that tell us the most. This is the case with the story of my friend's cat. My friend, Rachel, has a cat. Nothing special ...
Related piece