Showing posts with label Wild Flowers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wild Flowers. Show all posts

Friday, 31 July 2009

Getting the right name...

As I write this I am surrounded by reference books; books on flora and fauna; books books books! So I have become to the technicalities of wildlife photography. Not the capturing of a particular image, nor its artistic value. No I am fretting over whether a butterfly is a Large White or a Green Veined White.

Not only do I spend my time looking through books I then revert to examining endless photographs on line. This can be a bit dodgy as you are never quite sure whether the person who has named the creature is correct in the first place. So you endlessly switch between books and the screen. It is at times frustrating and also fascinating - I think???

Thursday, 28 May 2009

Poppy

The weather was just right this afternoon to do some flower photography; it was warm, dry and slightly overcast.   Out of the three the overcast is the most important as it means that there is a bright light source without being too bright - thus creating hasrh shadows.

So I started off in my garden capturing images of a lovely red poppy that is flowering at the moment.  After this I went to the local park and tried to capture images of buttercups.  As usual I failed.  I just can't get the right balance between the bright yellow flower and the green background.  I need to work on this further.  Another challange!

Again, I have put together a show on Flickr which can be accessed by clicking here:

Wednesday, 27 May 2009

Some Decent Weather...


What a lovely evening for photography.  The sunset was almost perfect - could have done with a few more clouds towards the east but can't really complain.   I spent the evening in and around Market Bosworth and the battlefield site.   There is a really fantastic lane there that has a really marvelous display of wildflowers - I'll no doubt visit this site over the next week or so to capture more of these flowers.   I was taking to a couple who were out on their evening constitution - they may well view this blog entry so Hello and I hope you enjoy this and the other photographs on the blog.

I then disappeared up a lane by Whitemoor.  As I came back I saw what, at first glance, looked like a rather close cropped cat.   It looked at me and I at it.  I then realised that it wasn't a cat but a Muntjac deer.  After a few moments the deer wondered off into the undergrowth. 

To see the other photographs I have made from this evening then click here.

Friday, 15 May 2009

Wot Flower???


Well what is in a name?  Quite a lot actually.  I have been going through the codes of practice and 2008 exhibition CD for the RPS Nature Group and one of the overwhelming impression for me is the need for authenticity and correct scientific names or as the code puts it...' should convey the essential truth of what the photographer saw at the time it was taken...'.  Now this posses me with certain problems.   I have little problem identifying fauna but flora is another matter.  The three photographs illustrate this really quite well.


All three were taken in a local park which is part of a flood meadow.  This produces an abundant bloom this time of year, one that cries out to be photographed.  However, here is the problem.   I know these flowers are Meadow Buttercups and Dandelions - no problem there.  However, interspersed in the meadow are far more delicate flowers which I have no idea of their name.  I have gone through my pocket field guide and am no further forward.  However, they make a lovely photograph but would this be acceptable for the Nature Group?   

Of course I have no answer to this yet and I am sure this will not be a problem as there will be many helpful people who will be able to identify the errant flower,   But does this effect the validity of the photograph?  I suppose the answer to this is yes and no.  Yes as a record of the plant but no when considering the broader aesthetic value of a photograph.

To examine this further consider the flower photographs of Niall Benvie.  Here he takes really wonderful portraits of individual flowers.  However, when you see his set up and the way his final images are produced it really does place a question mark over whether they are an authentic record of the flower.  Indeed this really does raise a whole series of questions about the use of flash photography - does this record the '...essential truth...'?   

Now I am not critising the rules it just something I will have to get used to and I have to say it is rather interesting way to photograph.  Indeed, the better you know a subject then generally the better the photograph.  As the code of practice puts it '...The photographer should be familiar with the natural history of the subject; the more complex the life-form and the rarer the species, the greater his/ her knowledge must be...'

This will make for an interesting learning curve.



Monday, 26 January 2009