Just Flowers - 05/29/2022

AlanLichty

Moderator
Nice blooms for starters Doug - I like the lilies.

My offering for today is a street side bouquet that is actually someone's hedgerow. The 12' tall hedge is somewhat untamed with lots of plants vying for sunlight but the primary plant is Photinia with the small white blooms and red tinted leaves. In this case they also have wisteria growing somewhere on the other side of the hedgerow that has poked through to offer up this nice scene. Pruning could be a painful task with the blackberries intertwined in the mix but I confess that I don't mind since this isn't on my property and I can poach some berries from the sidewalk in late July/early August when they ripen :)

PhotiniaWisteria.jpg
 

MonikaC

Well-Known Member
Nice blooms for starters Doug - I like the lilies.

My offering for today is a street side bouquet that is actually someone's hedgerow. The 12' tall hedge is somewhat untamed with lots of plants vying for sunlight but the primary plant is Photinia with the small white blooms and red tinted leaves. In this case they also have wisteria growing somewhere on the other side of the hedgerow that has poked through to offer up this nice scene. Pruning could be a painful task with the blackberries intertwined in the mix but I confess that I don't mind since this isn't on my property and I can poach some berries from the sidewalk in late July/early August when they ripen :)

View attachment 49595
What a confusion of beauty, Alan! And edible, to boot.....
 
Nice blooms for starters Doug - I like the lilies.

My offering for today is a street side bouquet that is actually someone's hedgerow. The 12' tall hedge is somewhat untamed with lots of plants vying for sunlight but the primary plant is Photinia with the small white blooms and red tinted leaves. In this case they also have wisteria growing somewhere on the other side of the hedgerow that has poked through to offer up this nice scene. Pruning could be a painful task with the blackberries intertwined in the mix but I confess that I don't mind since this isn't on my property and I can poach some berries from the sidewalk in late July/early August when they ripen :)

View attachment 49595
Nice job on selecting an area of this hedge that has a nice composition, Alan.
 

Ben Egbert

Forum Helper
Staff member
I bet yours are still standing up straight, though!

Most of them are. But I was referring to your images. I can isolate the flower and darken or soften the background, but unless I have a good background, I can't get the great ones like the rest of you folks do.
 

MonikaC

Well-Known Member
Most of them are. But I was referring to your images. I can isolate the flower and darken or soften the background, but unless I have a good background, I can't get the great ones like the rest of you folks do.
It's masking the subject then blurring the background. I think that Douglas gave you a precis on the tehnique a little while ago. I found it tedious if I didn't have a background that was significantly different from the flower & stem, so I'm learning to compose differently.
 

JimFox

Moderator
Staff member

Trent Watts

Well-Known Member
Nice shot Jim. This looks just like a plant in New Zealand (I lived there years ago for a bit). It was called a Red Hot Poker Plant. Wonder if it is the same species?
 

AlanLichty

Moderator
Nice shot Jim. This looks just like a plant in New Zealand (I lived there years ago for a bit). It was called a Red Hot Poker Plant. Wonder if it is the same species?
Also known as Torch Lily - we have been growing them in our gardens for decades. Very hardy plant that thrives in a wide variety of environments.
 
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