Monday, October 31, 2011
Saturday, April 09, 2011
Maple Leaves

Labels: Leaves, Nature, Panasonic DMC-G1
1 Comments:
- dan in marin said...
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Warren, tell me you knew the spider web would catch the sunlight perfectly.
Dan
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Backlit Backyard Leaves

After all was said and done, this was the only good photo of the day. I wouldn't say at all that the special trip to that fancy neighborhood was a waste, but it's funny how I found the best image right in my backyard.
Labels: Backyard Photography, Leaves, Nature, Tamron 18-270 SuperZoom
5 Comments:
- Warren T. said...
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Nice composition and lighting, Steve, good catch! I like the limited colors (black and green) here that emphasizes the light and different shades). That's a monster zoom range on the Tamron. Does it have image stabilization?
--WT - Lea said...
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ah i *heart* the backlighting too! cropping to the upper left 3 leaves would be a spectacularly captivating image, imo :)
- Steve Rosenbach said...
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Thanks Warren & Lea,
Lea - I quickly tried the crop this morning - it *is* good, thanks for the idea. I need to to a very little bit of photoshoping to take care of a small blob of adjacent leaf before I post it ;-)
Warren - it *does* have image stabilization, which is very effective. I'm planning to do a writeup on this lens Real Soon Now... if I do get to it ;-) I'll post it here as well as on 2ndExposure.
Best regards,
SteveR - dan in marin said...
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Nicely done Steve, that is the irony of photography, beauty is all around us and we often just need to capture it without elaborate trips etc. Once it is cropped it should be spectacular with the primary colors of black and green.
Dan - Warren T. said...
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my .02: I like the composition as it is. :)
I'm sure a tighter crop would also yield a nice composition, but it would be a different feeling.
--WT
Sunday, November 23, 2008
Ginkgo Fan

I never really noticed their elegant, fan-shaped leaves until I worked in Towson some years ago on a three-month contract. It was fall, and Pennsylvania Avenue in greater downtown Towson is graced with quite a few ginkgo trees. Even then, I didn't notice the leaves until they started to turn color and fall.
The ginkgo tree, Ginkgo biloba, is itself quite intersting. Among plants, it is sui generis, being the only species in the genus Ginkgo, which is the only member of the family Ginkgoaceae, in turn the only family in the order Ginkgoaceae, itself the only member of the class Ginkgoopsida, which is, you guessed it, the only member of the phylum Ginkgophyta.
Even among trees, ginkgos are especially long-lived and have been around longer than any other species - over 200 million years.
For this photo, I made use of a photographic axiom I learned years ago:
"Get close... then get closer."The macro mode of my digicam (Canon A620) let me "get closer," and some nice late-afternoon sidelighting contributed to make a dramatic image.
Labels: Canon A620, Ginkgo, Leaf, Leaves, Macro, Nature, Sidelighting
1 Comments:
- Lea said...
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Nice! Great shadows and textures :)
I like that axiom.. I'll try to keep it in mind for the future.. hehe
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