Garden Photography – Tips For Capturing The Gardens Splendour

Successful garden photography should convey a sense of beauty and intimacy. The viewer wants to feel the sunshine, smell the blossoms, and recapture a wonderful sense of peace and contentment. How can you make your photographs do all this?

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1. Learn To See What’s Really There

Frequently when your photographs come back, you wonder why you took them. When approaching a scene, take the first photograph just as you always have. Then, stop and think about what you are seeing and what attracted you to the scene in the first place.

Once you identify that, make it specifically the dominant feature of the photograph. Try to “boil down” the picture to its very essence. Ask yourself, what is the subject? How can I emphasize it? What is unnecessary? How can I eliminate those items? For example, if trying to take a single blossom or flower center, eliminate all unnecessary flowers, leaves, and background.

2. Steady Your Camera

When hand holding the camera, think of your body as a tripod. Your stance should be relaxed yet firm with feet apart and elbows tucked next to the body. The camera should be resting in the palm of your left hand with the right hand ready to fire. Tighten your body position. Don’t try to hold your breath, but exhale fully and lock it out of your body.

Or try a tripod – a must in low-light situations. For flower photography, opt for one that allows you to get close to the ground without reversing the center post. A quick-release device on the tripod is recommended.

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3. Get A Closer, More Intimate Feeling

The most common photography mistake is not getting close enough to the subject. Look at your lens and decide how close you can get without changing the focus. Move your body closer to the subject until it is in focus. For each lens, learn its minimum focal distance and move your body to that position.

Do you always use a 50mm lens in the garden? Next time you are practising your garden photography,  try your 200mm. A long lens causes the foreground and background to visually compress. That’s a nice effect. Explore each of your lenses and use them at their minimum focal distance. For example, close your eyes and smell a rose. Now do it with your eyes open.

How close are you and what do you see? Now try the same thing with your camera. Set the lens to its closest focal distance and walk toward the rose until it is in focus. Now you have an intimate view of the rose as well as its special fragrance. Capture it all!

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© Noella Ballenger

If you want to get still closer, explore the possibility of adding additional camera equipment.

Try a 2X teleextender (a supplemental lens that magnifies) . Or consider the addition of a lens tube; a spacer between the camera and the lens which makes the image in the viewfinder appear larger.

With both these two additions, the 2X and the tube, less light reaches the sensor which you must compensate for in your exposure (or let your in-camera light meter do it for you).

Or add close-focusing lens filters to the front of your lens, with no loss of light. If you really want to be abstract, put them all on the camera at the same time where the only thing in focus may be the edge of a petal.

Filling your frame with just parts of a flower gives the viewer an intimate feeling. Getting this close requires supplemental equipment and a macro lens. Become intimate with your subject.

Don’t be afraid to fill the frame with color and texture. To help move into a macro feeling with less expense, try macro lens filters (supplemental lenses which screw on the front of the lens), a tele-extender and/or extension tubes.

4. Look For the Light

The essence of good photography is light. Walk around the subject and learn to look for the various kinds. You should be able to see front lighting (it looks flat), side lighting (details and subject contours stand out) and back lighting (silhouettes and rim light).

On overcast days, flower colors vibrate. Photograph your garden at various times day under varying light conditions. Light should be the secondary subject of your photograph.

Front or side lighting tends to be less dramatic. When using kind of lighting select subjects with definite contours or brilliant colors.

On overcast days color seems to intensify. This weather is superb for shooting but use a tripod or keep your shutter speed at a higher level to assure steady and sharp images.

Light plays an important part in the dramatic effect of your photographs. Back lighting (the lighting coming toward the camera from the rear of the subject) is the most dramatic. They sparkle!

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5. Let it Rain

Clinging water drops on flowers produce fascinating images. Go out in the garden when the dew Is on the blossoms or at the end of a light rain. Include a diaper or lint-free cloth in your camera bag which readily absorbs water on equipment and dries out more quickly than other materials.

When out In the field on a stormy day, wipe down equipment frequently. Another tip: A simple plastic cap can cover the camera quickly between shots to keep it dry.

Raindrops add sparkling jewels to your flowers. In fact, a drop of water can become the subject of the photograph.

nb-1apple.jpg (4555 bytes)6. Watch Your Backgrounds

Your body position relative to the subject will determine the background. If you tower over a flower, the background will be the flower bed and dirt. If you are at eye level, the background may be flowers, greenery, or perhaps even sky.

For soft solid color, or black background, use your F-stop control. Instead of 1/60 second @ F16 (everything is sharp), try 1/500 at F5.6 (the subject should be sharp with the backgrounds a soft fuzzy color).

At either settings the exposure will be the same. Remember, if you want something to stand out, use the contrast behind it.

For example, a sharp subject stands out against a fuzzy background; a light subject against a dark: a dark subject against a light.

Soft color backgrounds can be made by shooting with the lens at a large aperture (i.e. f2.8, 4, 5.6) and limiting the depth of field.

The out-of-focus background becomes an attractive backdrop for the subject Focus on the subject is critical and should be very sharp. If you want a nice black background, have a friend cast a shadow behind the subject.

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nb_1bee.jpg (15834 bytes)7. Little Critters

An important part of your garden are the little critters there; bees, butterflies and bugs.

First, make yourself comfortable in long pants and a long-sleeved shirt. Insect repellent is a must, but never use cologne or perfume sprays!

You want the critters to stay on the flowers – not you. And speaking of creepy crawlies, they are part of what you are shooting and, whenever possible, include them in the photo. They can be exciting additions.

Critters in the garden always add interest to an image. For best results watch the critter carefully and don’t crowd it. Use a long lens, extension tubes and lens filters to help you get the image. Please remember, the garden is their home. Be a good guest.

8. Follow the Lines

Garden paths give the viewer an opportunity to join you on garden walks. Flower beds and rows of colors can also offer visual lines to lead you into the garden. So  when planning your garden photography Look for them for added interest to help lead the viewer’s eye into your photograph.

Lines leading into the picture help create an illusion of depth to direct the viewer’s attention to the main subject of the photograph. Remember, good composition begins with the way you arrange the visual elements of design; line, shape, color, light, texture and pattern. Look for, and emphasize them whenever you take a photograph.

Lines and paths into photos can be actual or implied. The eye follows either one with equal ease. Paths and visual stepping stones can lead the eye into the composition. Good composition is essential to interesting photographs.

nb_1flr.jpg (5039 bytes)9. Add Some Sparkle

Aluminum foil is always part of my basic camera gear. It can be a wonderful reflector adding just a little more light to the shadow side of a flower. Keep the same basic exposure but use the foil for a bit of sparkle to the darker areas.

As an example, look closely at the photograph here of a cactus bud. The photograph was taken in semi-overcast conditions with light coming from both directions.

The stronger light source is natural, diffused sunlight (side lighting). The light source from the foil coming in from the right is low, reflective light. They balance each other nicely and allow the contours and details of the flower to be seen. It’s a very subtle touch when done correctly.

10. Be Nice To Yourself

By all means, do lie on the ground to take that worm’s eye view, but paper yourself and get comfortable. For example, gazanias and poppies (two of my favorite subjects) are only inches tall meaning you must almost bury your chin in the ground to photograph them at eye level.

Take along a large lawn and leaf trash bag for just such an occasion to protect you from ground moisture. Or, it can also double as a windbreak by being clothespin-fastened to a low bush or sticks.

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Improving Your Garden Photography

TO IMPROVE, TAKE NOTES AND LEARN FROM YOUR “MISTAKES”

To improve, take notes on what you are doing, what you are seeing, what photographic techniques you are using and, when your photographs come back, write that information on the back of each one. Making sketches in the field will help you see more clearly.

Keeping track of what is successful as well as what is not, can make you a better photographer and bring some zing to your garden photographs.

This article first appeared in Garden & Landscapes, A service of Schering-Plough Pharmaceuticals, Spring, 1995.

Text and some images by Noella Ballenger
Some of these photos are copyrighted by Noella Ballenger. All Rights Reserved.

All written content (and most images) in these articles are copyrighted by the authors. Copyrighted material from Apogee Photo Mag should not be used elsewhere without seeking the authors permission.

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