Tag Archives: altering flowers

for Cellpic Sunday: An Abundance of Flowers.

Harriet, Patricia, Judy and Amelia–This year’s “Wild Woman” writing retreat participants. I asked for a flower arrangement on the table, but they got a bit carried away. Here I am carrying it home:

I’m standing in front of a mural on the front of Viva Mexico Restaurant. The woman in blue to my right is also me and the man with the shadows of the flowers obscuring part of his face is Forgottenman.  When we got home, I divided the flowers into 6 bunches and everyone took some come.

Below is Judy Reeves, the resourceful leader of our workshop who was not in the first photo because she took the photo:

For Cellpic Sunday

Bleached Flowers

Click on any flower to enlarge all and view as slide series.

For Cee’s Black and White Photo Challenge.

Flipping Out and Narrowing Down:Cee’s CCY Challenge 22

I have problems approaching anything in a left-brained manner and my locational dyslexia makes mirror images a problem, but there is something about  flipping an image that is intriguing to me.  I don’t really know why I prefer one view to the other, but I always do, and I know Cee can explain why.  As for cropping–that’s my baby!––all hands on instead of preplanning.  So, I’m going to take a few images to crop and flip and let’s see what happens.

I immediately saw an image within an image in this larger shot.  See if you can see it:

Version 2

Before I show the cropped version, here is this version flipped:

Version 3Here is the crop, both original and flipped:

IMG_7596IMG_7596 (1)Can you see why I chose this detail to crop?  Do you see the bird, and perhaps a chick on the branch below her?  Okay if you don’t see the chick, as it is a bit more abstract.

Both Yolanda and I prefer the right-facing bird.  I think Cee would say it is because the eye goes to the sun-shaped light spot and then moves down to the bird and circles around to the right before curling to the left, to take in the entire scene.  With the left-facing bird, the eye goes to the “sun” , down the bird and off the tail to the edge of the photo, leaving out the entire left side.  I may or may not be right about this.  All I know is that I like the first one better.

Now I’m off in search of more to flop and chop!!!


https://ceenphotography.com/2016/06/01/reminder-cees-compose-yourself-challenge-22-guide-the-viewer-and-flipping-photos/

Cooking with Flowers––Flower of the Day, May 10, 2016

Even the blandest flower can be spiced up.  Take for instance this unspectacular shot of dahlias:

IMG_4877 copyI 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:

IMG_4877 (3)
Pretty fuzzy, but some interesting shapes, shadows and shades. Still not blogworthy, though, so I played around some more and got this:

IMG_4877 (2)
and this:

IMG_4877 (1)

and this:

IMG_4877 (3)

and finally, this:

IMG_4877

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/