Thursday, March 26, 2015

Photographing Flowers - My Floral Life



Photographing 
Flower is My Passion


No matter where they are!

I have always loved flowers since childhood.  My great grandmother and all of her daughters had prized gardens and I always had a place in them.  While not a whole row maybe, but always a plant of section of my own to tend.  The glories of Spring and Summer in a California garden has never left me.  My only regret each year was when it was over and the beauty was gone, replaced by only dead leaves and unkempt shrubbery.

Until I first saw the awesome paintings of Georgia O'Keeffe it never occurred to me that there was a way to save and savor the beautiful experiences of gardening.  I had always drawn and doodled flowers, but my first experienced with a 35 MM camera drove home the impact and immediacy of photographic results.  Even though, in the early days I was limited by a really meager budget and the interminable wait-time for commercial (drug store) processing and return time.  The very best days came when I had my own darkroom and could not only process and print my own photos at my convenience, but I could modify the reality of what I had actually seen.  I could make them better!

The biggest break-through of all for me came with the introduction of the digital camera. In the years that followed I purchased more and more sophisticated cameras.  The best was a gift from my husband who bought me a Canon EOS 620, a truly professional model that I grew to love after learning to use it's sophisticated features.  I had a 35-70 lens and a 70-300 lens.  With them I captured my world!   The first digital camera I ever used was an apple digital camera that was no more than 1 mega-pixel.  I used that camera to photograph my students, include media in a newsletter for my department.... it got the job done!   I finally decided I had to purchase my own digital single lens reflex camera.  My first mega digital camera was the Canon EOS D-10.  The good news was that my other Canon film lenses could work with it.

I concentrated on flowers since they were the closest and most readily accessible subjects to me.  As I learned more, and revisited the work of Georgia O'Keeffe, I realized I needed a macro lens to really get close and capture the hearts and souls of the flowers I loved so much.  The need for new equipment has never ended... more macros, ring-lights, extension tubes, flexible, articulating tripods...  It never ends, but neither does my love of photography and especially flowers.








Fall Fas Been Spectacular in 2014

Ron and I had the great opportunity to make two road trips in September and early october.  The colors were breathtaking.  I'm really happy with the photos I took but yearning to go back up and take some more.  Fall isn't over yet, although the weather is trying indicate otherwise.  

Our first road trip was to Red Mountain Pass, Silverton and Molas Pass.  We weren't sure what we would find but we certainly weren't disappointed.

We stopped on Hwy. 550 many time to take photos of the scenery, but because we had a time limitation we hurried on to our destination.

The photos below are of Red Mountain and the surrounding areas, including the Yankee Girl Mine.

Molas Lake 9 miles below Silverton, CO


Yankee GirlMine near Red Mountain Pass







These pictures reflect the beautiful golden scenery along the way.


Lake /San Cristobal near Crede, CO
Aspen lined path near Crede, CO
North Clear Creek Falls, near Creede, CO