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flower

Making Tulips “Pop” With Photoshop

April 6, 2012 by info@3QuartersToday.com

Photoshop is a powerful photography tool when used properly. My goal for most photo editing is to create an image that doesn’t look like it’s been edited. So let’s render an image of a tulip into something that pops just a little, but doesn’t take it over the edge.

Tulips after Photoshop Editing
Tulips after Photoshop Editing

See how subtle editing can improve a photograph without going over the top, as I have a tendency to do sometimes, according to my daughter.

Tulip SOOC (straight out of the camera)
Tulip SOOC (straight out of the camera)

This edit first involved adding a levels adjustment layer and darkening the whole image.  I selected the pink color in Image/Adjustment/Selective Color and added more magenta, which brightened the color in the petals.

The white portion of the petals seemed washed out so I then used the Burn tool and stroked over the creases in the bottom of the petal, which brought out the fine streaks.  I then used the sponge tool and desaturated the background.

I tried some special effects with this image, but I was never quite happy with them, so I settled on realism.

Learn How to Edit in Photoshop

120 Easy Tips And Tricks For Photoshop: LearningAdobe Photoshop CS6 Revealed (Adobe CS6)Adobe Photoshop CS6 Classroom in a BookAdobe Photoshop Elements 13Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 5Adobe Creative Cloud Photography plan (Photoshop CC +

Filed Under: Photography, Photoshop Friday Tagged With: Adobe Photoshop, Color, flower, flowers, fotofriday, friday, garden, Gardening, Gardens, Graphics, Image Editing, Petal, photo editing, Photoshop, photoshop friday, pink, Spring, Tulip

#12/52: Flower Porn and More

April 2, 2012 by info@3QuartersToday.com

Oops, did I really say that? Flower porn? Oh, I said it again. I’m really into Flower porn (not human kind so stop there if you are and just leave), which is very close up shots of naked reproductive parts of flowers, the stamen and pistils or macro photography. I just can’t help it, I have to not only look but point my camera at those intimate detailed parts.

Tulip flower porn
Week 12: Tulip flower porn

Some of my favorite flowers to expose are Irises, check out my shots from last year.

Summer Day Lily

The secret to good macro photography is plenty of light and a fast shutter speed. With flower photography wind is your enemy and some days you may just need to bring the blooms inside. Expose for the petals to get the texture and details. Try different angles, different lighting, back-lit sun streaming through the petals. Get on the ground and shoot up against the sky. Break out of the boring and stereotypical flower photos.

Iris Garden in Nebraska
Iris’s Galore

Use an open aperture under 5.0 and focus on the itty bitty flower sexual parts, you know the ones, deep inside the flower that few people look dare peek when no one is looking.

Macro Peony
Macro Peony

Macro Photography Tools

Macro Extension Tube Ring for Canon EOS DSLR / SLR4-In-1 Lens Attachment – For iPhone 6, Telephoto/Macro/Fish Eye +CowboyStudio One Way Macro Focusing Rail Slider Macro Bellows forNeewer FC100 32 Super Bright LED Macro Ring Flash For77mm Macro Reverse Ring Adapter for Nikon AI MountUnderstanding Close-Up Photography: Creative Close Encounters with Or Without aClose-Up and Macro Photography: Art and TechniquesCloseup Shooting: A Guide to Closeup, Tabletop and Macro Photography

Flower Photography Tips

How to master the art of flower photography

Spring has finally arrived, and with it some of nature’s most stunning artistry: flowers. A favorite of nature photographers around the world, flowers can be a surprisingly finicky photo subject. Simply snapping a photo in passing doesn’t quite do the …

How does your garden grow? – OCL series offers something for all garderners

“The basics of flower photography will teach how simple changes can make a big difference in personal photographs. Equipment needs from the very basic to more sophisticated camera equipment, including lenses, props, etc., will be covered.” Participants …

Put a spin on flower photography

Spring is only a couple weeks away and that means flowers will be springing up all over the place. For the camera buff the splashes of colors break the monotony of gray days and generates an eagerness to venture out and capture their long-awaited blooms.

25 flower photography tips for beginners | Digital Camera …

Improve your spring photography with these 25 flower photography tips that show you everything from how to compose to how to set your camera.

Spring is Here: Beautiful Flower Photography – PictureCorrect

Just step out of your door and turn around. Someone has planted flowers in front of the building? That could be the perfect place to trigger a few photos! For some unusual and interesting flower photography, take a trip to nature, maybe to park …

31 Incredibly Captivating Flower Photos by Wei-San Ooi

Here are 31 of my absolute favorites from her expansive collection — photographs of flowers that somehow kick the crap out of (a scientific term) 90% of the flower photography we’ve seen — broken down by type of flower for …

 

 

Filed Under: Project 52 Tagged With: Botany, flower, flower photography, Gardening, Gardens, iris, macro photography, peony, Photography, Plant, Plant sexuality, Project 52, Stamen, tulips

19 Facts About Daffodils

March 28, 2012 by info@3QuartersToday.com

19 Facts About Daffodils

19 Facts About Daffodils

Here are some facts you may not know about these cheerful blooms of spring.

Black White Kitchen Decor Ceramic Tile
Black White Kitchen Decor Ceramic Tile
by ndjmom
  • The daffodil is also known as Jonquil, Narcissus, Paperwhite, and the ‘Poet’s Hower’.
  • Narcissus is a classical Greek name in honor of a beautiful youth who became so entranced with his own reflection that he pined away and the gods turned him into this flower.  (Daff Seek, official photo database of the American Daffodil Society)
  • Squirrels will not eat daffodil bulbs, the bulbs and leaves contain poisonous crystals that only certain insects can eat with impunity, so don’t plant where dogs like to dig. (American Daffodil Society)
Daffodil Quote Spring Flower Throw Pillow
Daffodil Quote Spring Flower Throw Pillow
by ndjmom
  • Poultry keepers thought the flower to be unlucky and disallowed it in their homes, as they believed it would stop their hens from laying eggs. (Funflowerfacts.com)
  • Scientists have discovered narciclasine, a natural compound found in daffodil bulbs, may be therapeutic in treating brain cancer.
  • Daffodils contain a toxic sap which is harmful to other flowers. When arranging in a vase don’t mix with other flowers unless the daffodils have been soaking in water for 24 hours. Do not recut the stems as it will re-release the toxin. (Funflowerfacts.com)
  • The ancient Romans cultivated them extensively, though daffodils became a forgotten flower till 1600. Sometime around 1629, a few Englishmen took the daffodil out of the weeds and gave it a place in the garden. (Onlinegardeningtips.com)
  • The daffodil is the flower for March.  (Gonetopot.com #7-12)
Watercolor and Pen Daffodils Note Card
Watercolor and Pen Daffodils Note Card
by MartiGambaArt
  • The Romans believed the sap from these flowers had special healing powers.
  • The Daffodil Data Bank accounts for over 13,000 hybrids, and apart from the regular yellow kind, there are others which come in a range of color combinations, like yellow and orange, yellow and white, orange and white, lime-green and pink colors.
  • In the Victorian days, Daffodils represented chivalry. Today it represents hope.)
  • In Wales, it is traditional to wear a daffodil on Saint David’s Day (March 1).
  • The daffodil is the national flower of Wales.
  • Their botanic name is narcissus, daffodils are sometimes called jonquils, and in England, because of their long association with Lent, they’re known as the “Lent Lily.”( Teleflora #14-18)
  • In Wales, it’s said if you spot the first daffodil of the season, your next 12 months will be filled with wealth.
  • Chinese legend has it that if a daffodil bulb is forced to bloom during the New Year, it will bring good luck to your home.
  • The Daffodil is the 10th wedding anniversary flower
  • A gift of daffodils is said to ensure happiness.
  • Always remember to present daffodils in a bunch – the same legends that associate this cheerful flower with good fortune warn us that when given as a single bloom, a daffodil can foretell misfortune.

Daffodil Gifts for the Garden Fan

Learn facts about daffodils and find fun fun gardening gifts with yellow spring flowers. Perfect for the person who loves flower gardens and wants to decorate their home with bright spring flowers.
Watercolor Daffodil 2 Pattern Adult Cloth Face Mask
Watercolor Daffodil 2 Pattern Adult Cloth Face Mask
by MartiGambaArt
Watercolor Daffodils Flower Portrait Monogram Tote Bag
Watercolor Daffodils Flower Portrait Monogram Tote Bag
by FaridaGallery

More Facts About Daffodils

  • Farmer forced to apply for permission for daffodils (telegraph.co.uk)
  • Cloudy with a chance of Daffodils (erinkphoto.wordpress.com)
  • Narcissus (picturesinlivingcolor.wordpress.com)
  • Daffodil Days ……..They Are Blooming Early!!!!!! (thegardendiaries.wordpress.com)


Filed Under: Project 365 Tagged With: American Daffodil Society, Botany, bulbs, daffodil, daffodil facts, facts about daffodils, flower, flowers, Fun Facts, Gardening, Narcissus, Spring, Triva

Day 197/365: Day Lily in All It’s Orange Glory

June 22, 2011 by info@3QuartersToday.com

Day Lily
Day Lily

Lilies were my Grandmothers flowers. She lived in Oklahoma and they loved the heat. Seemed that’s the only thing that would bloom in 100F weather.

Filed Under: Project 365 Tagged With: 365project, bloom, flower, flowers, lily, memories, Nebraska, orange, postaday, project365

Day 164/365: Bleeding Hearts Liberals, No It’s Not Like That

May 18, 2011 by info@3QuartersToday.com

Bleeding Heart Plant
Day 164: Bleeding Hearts (SOOC)

I’m not delving into politics, but isn’t that the phrase that comes to mind when someone says “Bleeding Hearts?” Wish it wasn’t true as these flowers don’t deserve that moniker.  I love Bleeding Hearts, they are one of the few flowers that flourish in the shade and instead of being a sad plant it reminds me of Christmas ornaments hanging from a tree.

My backyard gets so little sun, especially next to the fence, and this hardy plant has survived much abuse. It has been run over countless times by a lawn mower, accidents caused by well meaning people who help me mow occasionally and can’t tell weeds from flowers. Guess that’s my fault, I should get rid of the weeds. Last year I did, so I think my Bleeding Heart Plant is safe.

Photography Notes: Another straight out of the camera from my Olympus E-10 camera. Only took four images at different settings before I rushed back in to dip strawberries that day

Filed Under: Project 365 Tagged With: 365project, Botany, flower, flowers, humor, Olympus, Photography, Plant, politics, postaday, project365, Spring

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