Posts in Category: bokeh

10/15/2011: Simple

The Carl Zeiss Sports Optics offices are in an industrial park just off 295 in Chester, Virginia south of Richmond. It is a nice park, with lots of well landscaped catchment ponds and fountains, small groves of trees and well shaded walks. Flowers are everywhere you could plant flowers. All in all, a nice place for offices if you have to be in an industrial park. Many of the ponds are planted with decorative reeds and grasses. This is a simple shot of the seed head of a decorative grass, framed against the surface of the pond with a longish zoom. I like the lines and the colors. I like the bokeh…enhanced by sparkles of sun on surface of the water. Elegant. Simple.

Canon SX40HS at about 570mm equivalent field of view. f5.8 @ 1/160th @ ISO 400. Program with iContrast.

Processed in Lightroom for Clarity and Sharpness.

8/29/2011: The Bee and the Bokeh

What makes this image interesting to me, beyond the fact that I like bees and flowers, is the bokeh. I especially like the receding diagonals of the brown stems, and the way they create kind of ceiling for the frame, and the well out of focus flower head in the lower left corner that echoes the slope of the daisies. Even the two strands of barbed wire turn to eye-leading graphical elements rather than distractions when defocused as much as they are. And I love the contrast between the smooth background and the wedge of well focused yellow and green that fills the right of the frame. I wish I could say I carefully planned the shot that way, but honestly, I was attempting to catch and frame the feeding bee, and the rest of it just fell into place…with a bit of a compositional crop from the right to get the bee off the static center of the frame.

Nikon Coolpix P500 at 538mm equivalent field of view, f5.7 @ 1/320th @ ISO 160. Close Up mode.

Processed in Lightroom for Clarity and Sharpness. Cropped from the right for composition.

8/22/2011: Purple Blazing Star with Goldenrod bokeh

Okay…after yesterday’s post, we have an image containing a real weed. To anyone who suffers from allergies to tis pollen, Goldenrod is most certainly a weed. Still, it is a very attractive plant in bloom, and here makes a lovely frame for the lone stalk of Blazing Star. I saw this shot in my mind before I found the angle to capture it…with the camera well below waist level and using the flip-out LCD for framing.

Nikon Coolpix P500 at full zoom, 810mm equivalent field of view, f5.7 @ 1/500th @ ISO 160. Program with Active D-Lighting.

Processed in Lightroom for Clarity and Sharpness.

8/16/2011: Monarch and Blazing Star

Driving back through the Plains from my excursion to Plains Pond last Saturday, I caught a butterfly in the Northern Blazing Star out of the corner of my eye. It was headed away from me, but I pulled up, grabbed the camera, zoomed out, pointed it out the open window of the car and got off one shot. The contrast in color is pretty dramatic here, and the telephoto end of the zoom throws the background into pleasing bokeh. Cropped from the right for composition.

Nikon Coolpix P500 at 538mm equivalent field of view, f5.7 @ 1/320th @ ISO 160. Program with Active D-Lighting.

Processed in Lightroom for Clarity and Sharpness.

7/5/2011: Foxglove in the morning.

According to wikipedia, there are many theories as to where the name foxglove comes from, but the one that makes most sense to me is that it is a corruption of folk’s glove or fairies glove. (Perhaps combined with the fact that they were also called Fuchs’ Glove, in honor of the man who first gave them their scientific name…digitalis.) In fact, according to the same source, they are still called folk-fairies-glove in Wales. Children in Wales, apparently, still clip a stalk and strike the blooms against the hand to hear the fairy thunder as the wee folk who hide inside the bells escape in a huff. Such strange things you can find on wiki. 🙂

This is an early morning shot, and, in addition to the beauty of the blooms with their beads of dew, I really like what the sun was doing with the out-of-focus background. Great bokeh. To achieve that effect I set the camera to Close Up Mode to engage macro, and then over-road the 32mm equivalent setting, zooming up to 435mm equivalent so that I could back well away from the plant and still achieve a macro effect.

Nikon Coolpix P500. f5.6 @ 1/125th @ ISO 160. Close Up Mode.

Processed in Lightroom for Clarity and Sharpness.

This is, by the way, another shot from my The Yard collection on WideEyedInWonder, all shots taken in our small yard in Kennebunk Maine.

6/3/2011: Dandelion Relapse

It grieves me to report that brother Ingraham has suffered a dandelion relapse, or in the more colorful vernacular, “fallen off the dandelion wagon.” It turns out that even as he was writing yesterday’s moving dandelion confession (which I am certain moved you as much as it did me)…he was surreptitiously watching the sun creep toward a particularly lush patch of dandelion that grows in the corner of the yard where the neighbors walk their dog, and almost as soon as he hit the publish button, he threw on some clothes, unshowered, and ran out with his camera for another fix. Oh the weakness of the human flesh. Which is why, brothers, we need each other. Staunch friends, let Brother Ingraham be a lesson, and let us rally round and support him as he returns to sanity and sobriety after yet another dandelion binge. It could happen to any of us. Guard yourselves and each other. There are weeks yet until we are safe from temptation. Just as brother Ingraham so eloquently confessed…only yesterday. One day at a time!

Nikon Coolpix P500 in Close Up (macro) scene mode, 32mm equivalent field of view. 1) f7.1 @ 1/800th @ ISO 160, 2) f5.6 @ 1/800th @ ISO 160. The sun is directly behind the head of the dandelion in both shots. The flip out LCD came into play of course…they really do walk their dog there. 🙂

Processed in Lightroom for Clarity and Sharpness (with a touch of extra recovery and some fill light to balance the difficult exposure…but still the camera really did very well). Until next time. One day at a time!

5/29/2011: Rhodora

Happy Sunday!

Ralph Waldo Emerson. 1803–1882

The Rhodora

On Being Asked Whence Is the Flower

IN May, when sea-winds pierced our solitudes,

I found the fresh Rhodora in the woods,

Spreading its leafless blooms in a damp nook,

To please the desert and the sluggish brook.

The purple petals, fallen in the pool,
       

Made the black water with their beauty gay;

Here might the red-bird come his plumes to cool,

And court the flower that cheapens his array.

Rhodora! if the sages ask thee why

This charm is wasted on the earth and sky,

Tell them, dear, that if eyes were made for seeing,

Then Beauty is its own excuse for being:

Why thou wert there, O rival of the rose!

I never thought to ask, I never knew:

But, in my simple ignorance, suppose

The self-same Power that brought me there brought you.

I could not have said it better myself! 🙂 And there is even a Sunday thought in there. I have been photographing Rhodora every spring for years and this is the first time I have come across this poem.

The Rhodora, just a few scattered plants, was in bloom along the edge of a little marshy pond near my home in Kennebunk. If we ever get another sunny day (which is in some doubt in southern Maine this year) I want to go to Saco Heath, about 15 miles from here where it blooms in mass.

For now, these few will do! As I am sure Ralph Waldo would agree.

Nikon Coolpix P500 1) 32mm (Close Up mode for macro), f5 @ 1/1000th @ ISO 160, 2) 32mm (Close Up mode for Macro) f5 @ 1/800th @ ISO 160.

Processed in Lightroom for Clarity and Sharpness.

5/24/2011: Lady Slippers v.2011

As I mentioned on Sunday, our wildflowers are about 3 weeks late here in Southern Maine. Lady Slippers are generally in full bloom on Mother’s Day. This year, this past Saturday at Rachel Carson National Wildlife Headquarters, all but a few were still in the green bud stage as above…still more than a few sunny days away from bloom…and we aren’t expecting any sun until at least Thursday of this week. Maybe next weekend they will have popped.

There is one spot, on the back side of the loop trail at Rachel Carson, where they have cut a new opening out to the marsh and built a new deck…new two years ago that is. Below the deck, on the slope facing the sun most of the morning, is where Lady Slippers will first be in bloom if they are in bloom anywhere, and this year was no exception. I found 5 or 6 plants and 6 or 7 blooms…but oh how pale compared to last spring’s show. Still, they are always magnificent. Ours are the Pink variety.

The new camera allows an even closer approach than last year, and I took advantage of all the macro it has to offer in the second and fifth shots. This new lens has wonderful bokeh, assisted, I suspect by a little in camera digital wizardry!

Nikon Coolpix P500 in Close Up Scene mode, 32mm equivalent field of view at anything from 6 inches to 3/4 inch. All images at f3.7 and ISO 160, shutter speeds from 1/200th to 1/640th.

Processed for Clarity and Sharpness in Lightroom. (I have added a bit on the Lightroom processing required with the new camera on my Lightroom processing page here or via the link in the header.)

5/22/2011: Painted Trillium

Happy Sunday! Normally by the 22nd of May, you only find a few late blooming Trillium, but our spring wildflowers are running almost 3 weeks late in Southern Maine this year, and a visit to Rachel Carson National Wildlife Refuge head-quarters yesterday, during our first break after 6 days of steady rain, turned them up in full bloom. We have the Painted variety here, though I grew up with the Red Trillium in up-state New York. My mother called it blood-root…I thought because of the color of the flower…but it turns out that in herbal medicine the rhizome is sometimes used to treat female blood aliments. There is another plant actually called bloodroot, but my mother often used the names for plants and birds that were common in rural up-state New York, the names she grew up with, rather than those found in any reference book. It was years before I realized that her wild canary was actually a Common Goldfinch.

And in researching Trillium this morning, I found that what look like leaves above ground are actually bracts, with the true leaves occurring underground, wrapping the rhizome. The bracts of Trillium do, unlike some brachs, actually act like leaves, since they have chlorophyll and are the only source of food for the plant…stranger and stranger.

These two shots, by the way, are at opposite extremes. The first was taken with macro at the “best” setting of 32mm equivalent field of view (best as selected by the Macro Scene Mode: the setting that gives closest focus and the largest image scale), and the second was taken with macro at the long end of the zoom…810mm equivalent…since the flowers were beyond easy reach behind a rail. Macro as set by the camera allows you to get within 2 cm, or about 3/4 inch, for views like the one below.

All the shots were handheld.

Nikon Coolpix P500, 1) and 3) Macro at 32mm equivalent, 3) Macro at 810mm equivalent. 1) f3.7 @ 1/400th @ ISO 160, 2) f5.7 @ 1/320th @ ISO 160, and 3) f3.7 @ 1/320th @ ISO 160. Macro mode evidently does some digital trickery to extend the foreground depth of field, while throwing the background further out of focus than it would normally be, as all three shots have more of the look of macros taken with larger sensors and conventional macro lenses…not with a small senor, short focal length, Point and Shoot.

And for Sunday: I picked the Trilliums this morning, from among recent images, for their beauty and for some vague association in my mind with the trinity…and with incarnation. The three pure white petals stained purple red, blood red, at the center. Maybe it is kind of abstract…but to me that is the wonder of the incarnation…purity that bleeds, producing beauty. But the real blessing came in learning a bit more about the plant…for instance it is illegal to pick it in many states and some provinces of Canada…and in remembering my mother, when I was maybe 6 or 7 at the oldest, taking me out to the woods in the spring to look for what she called blood-root. She would never let me pick it either. It was just something she enjoyed finding, and took the time to show me. And that too, is the wonder of incarnation. Love in the blood.

5/8/2011: Cherry. Happy Sunday. Happy Mother’s Day!

When we bought our home in Kennebunk, 16 years ago, I went to the Dollar Store in Wells, and bought a few plants for the yard. I paid $1.00 for a little stick with a few roots, about 1/2 inch through at its thickest, more dead than alive, and brought it home and planted it near the stump of what had clearly been a very large pine tree. My wife made some attempt to keep it pruned over the years, but today the trunk is 14 inches through and it stands taller then the peak of the roof of our story-and-a-half home. Each year it throws more blossoms: delicate and beautiful. Each year I look at it and remember that hopeless stick I rescued from a pile at the Dollar Store…and marvel that it has turned into this majestic tree that showers us with blossoms as the Creator showers us with blessings. Since the height of its bloom is always around Mother’s Day, it serves as a celebration of our time in our home, and of the woman who makes it one, my wife Carol. Happy Mother’s Day.

And that is really all the Sunday thought I have…and all I need. Thank you God, for this life we live together, for our children, for our home, for the absolute blessing and miracle of Cherry blossoms from a half dead stick. Who would have believed?

Nikon Coolpix P500. Processed for clarity and sharpness in Lightroom.

Happy Sunday. Happy Mother’s Day.