
https://ceenphotography.com/2016/05/18/flower-of-the-day-may-19-2016-bearded-irises/
This surprise awaited me in my garden today. These colors of gold and burnt orange surround me. They are the colors of the outside of my house and studio as well as my bedroom.

https://ceenphotography.com/2016/05/15/flower-of-the-day-may-16-2016-iris/
I love this shot of poinciana blooms backed up by telephone lines swathed in spherical bromeliad plants seeded by the sticky seeds clinging to the feet of birds who perch on them.


Tillandsia Recurvata is the name of this bromeliad often found on telephone lines in my area of Mexico.
https://ceenphotography.com/2016/05/14/flower-of-the-day-may-15-2016-daffodil/
I loved this street scene–with everyone walking right down the middle of the street. Sidewalks in Mexico seem to be used more for sitting, setting up little mom and pop stores and for courtship rituals. Everything else seems to occur in the streets. Cars stop in the middle of the street for their drivers to talk to passing friends, kids play ball there, dogs hobnob, trucks or cars with loudspeakers drive oh so slowly, blasting their news, fruit trucks or gas trucks or water trucks distribute their wares, garbage trucks park while their workers run to neighboring houses to pick up garbage. Construction workers pile huge mountains of sand and brick there, and the recently bereaved erect tents they fill with chairs for mourners, blocking off the entire street. Sometimes it seems as though the passage of traffic is of the least consideration.
https://ceenphotography.com/2016/05/12/flower-of-the-day-may-13-2016-rose/

This is the second flower brought to me by the hummingbird lady. I can’t get over the pattern on the front part of the flower and I’m wondering if it was caused by being wrapped around the pistil. The other part of the flower doesn’t seem to have the pattern on it, so perhaps it was wrapped around it on the outside. I’ve never noticed this in any other flower before and it makes it look artificial, but it isn’t
https://ceenphotography.com/2016/05/10/flower-of-the-day-may-11-2016-bearded-iris/
The hummingbird lady brought me this bloom when I was manning the information booth at the Lake Chapala Society. I once knew what it was and I remember it has a sinister association, but I can’t remember what it is. It is an exotic and for some reason I associate it with a Venus flytrap..Perhaps a flower that puts out an odor that attracts flies and then devours them? This is all on the edge of my mind, and I may be totally wrong, but in any case, I think it is interesting against the blue of the counter and the blue of the wall. If you are curious about the hummingbird lady, click on her name above.
5 minutes later––Ha!! Mind like a steel trap! I was right! This flower is a STAPELIA GIGANTEA–one of a few flowers that smells like rotting meat and so attracts mainly flies. The purpose, however, is not for the flower to feed on the flies, but rather for the flies to pollinate the flowers.
Even the blandest flower can be spiced up. Take for instance this unspectacular shot of dahlias:
I had decided to throw it away, but instead transferred it to a folder on my desktop that said “Flowers Unused.” It’s where I put things I have considered using in my blog but haven’t—either because I found one I liked better or meant to use but lost on my desktop or ones that I’m just saving. Sometimes I put things there just because I don’t know where else to put them… or they wind up there by accident when they should have gone into the file of photos already used in my blog.
I checked and found it was fair game. I’d never used it in a blog post. On the other hand, it was so unspectacular that I was a bit embarrassed to use it, even when cropped down to a single flower. So, I played around a bit and ended up with this:

Pretty fuzzy, but some interesting shapes, shadows and shades. Still not blogworthy, though, so I played around some more and got this:
and this:
and finally, this:
All of these photos came from the first photo shown, making use of only cropping, exposure, contrast, highlights, shadows, saturation, temperature, tint and sharpness settings—the basic tools in the edit function of Photos—the app on Mac that replaced iPhoto. Pretty fun. Like making a tasty new dish from leftovers in the fridge that anyone else would have tossed out.
https://ceenphotography.com/2016/05/09/flower-of-the-day-may-10-2016-bearded-iris/