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May24-A - 09A_1731_Red-Poppy.jpg
Papaver orientale
Hooray!! My first oriental. I have had a terrible time growing perennial oriental poppies, for some reason. I have tried from seed a few times without success, and even mail-ordered root stock has failed for me a couple of times. I put in a few roots again last fall, and here is my first success. This is one of the red varieties, as opposed to the species orange, and he just opened this morning after an overnight rain. This is also an example of working to get reds right in the image. For reasons I have never really understood, bright saturated reds tend to overexpose. This leads to a picture with just a splotch of bright red color with no texture or detail. To compensate for that, this image was underexposed by 1-1/3 stops. Even then, I also had to reduce the luminescence (brightness) of the red channel by an additional 55% to pull out the texture in the petals. Canon 1DmkIII; EF16-35mm f2.8L; 35mm; ISO-200; f5.6; 1/80-sec |
#2
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May24-A - 09A_1731_Red-Poppy.jpg
On Sun, 24 May 2009 08:03:14 -0400, John - Pa. wrote:
Papaver orientale Hooray!! My first oriental. I have had a terrible time growing perennial oriental poppies, for some reason. I have tried from seed a few times without success, and even mail-ordered root stock has failed for me a couple of times. I put in a few roots again last fall, and here is my first success. This is one of the red varieties, as opposed to the species orange, and he just opened this morning after an overnight rain. This is also an example of working to get reds right in the image. For reasons I have never really understood, bright saturated reds tend to overexpose. This leads to a picture with just a splotch of bright red color with no texture or detail. To compensate for that, this image was underexposed by 1-1/3 stops. Even then, I also had to reduce the luminescence (brightness) of the red channel by an additional 55% to pull out the texture in the petals. Canon 1DmkIII; EF16-35mm f2.8L; 35mm; ISO-200; f5.6; 1/80-sec A beauty and a great job. |
#3
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May24-A - 09A_1731_Red-Poppy.jpg
In article , John - Pa.
wrote: Papaver orientale Hooray!! My first oriental. I have had a terrible time growing perennial oriental poppies, for some reason. I have tried from seed a few times without success, and even mail-ordered root stock has failed for me a couple of times. I put in a few roots again last fall, and here is my first success. This is one of the red varieties, as opposed to the species orange, and he just opened this morning after an overnight rain. This is also an example of working to get reds right in the image. For reasons I have never really understood, bright saturated reds tend to overexpose. This leads to a picture with just a splotch of bright red color with no texture or detail. To compensate for that, this image was underexposed by 1-1/3 stops. Even then, I also had to reduce the luminescence (brightness) of the red channel by an additional 55% to pull out the texture in the petals. Canon 1DmkIII; EF16-35mm f2.8L; 35mm; ISO-200; f5.6; 1/80-sec begin 644 09A_1731_Red-Poppy.jpg [Image] end It has purple pollen? That's amazing, and beautiful! -- 8^)~ Sue (remove the x to email) ~~~~ http://www.umbrellahatsociety.com/ http://www.suzanne-eckhardt.com/ |
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