Sunday, 28 July 2013

David's Jasione


Another image of a jasione flower - this one is from earlier in its lifecycle than the previous post.

I've finally bought myself a new laptop, which I'm in the process of setting up. Its a much more powerful beast than the eight year old machine that I'm writing this on and this will probably be one of the last posts written on it. 

I've installed RawTherapee on the new machine, so this will also be the swansong for UFRaw. It will be interesting to see what difference this new setup makes to the images.

PS: Thanks go to Ian Dart for the title of this post.

Sunday, 21 July 2013

Jasione and the Argonauts


This is an image of a jasione flower. No, me neither. We have them growing in pots at the front of the house. I've no idea where they came from, I assume that my wife must have bought and planted them, quite possibly when I was present, but I have no memory of it.

They appear to have a fairly complex lifecycle - a blue flower morphs its shape a couple of times before developing into the green seed head which appears in this image. I have a few images of the earlier phases, which I may post over the coming week.

Sunday, 14 July 2013

The Name of The Rose


"Peace" apparently.

I've been trying to make images of the roses all summer, and failing. This is the first that's been worth posting.

Praktica Update

The idea of resurrecting the Praktica has been niggling away at me. So, I tracked down a replacement for the PX625 battery, courtesy of Maplin. And the exposure meter still works, so the idea lives on - the next step is to get hold of a roll of film and make some exposures. There's a Kodak shop in Keynsham - no, really - so Tri-X may not be out of the question.

More of this soon, I expect. 

Wednesday, 10 July 2013

In Clover


We have an L-shaped lawn that runs across the front - East - side of the house and round the North side. The lawn at the front is relatively new, laid when we remodeled the garden after our son was born. The side lawn is older, essentially untouched since we moved in.

A couple of years ago, I decided I was going to improve the quality of the side lawn, which was full of clover, moss and weeds. So, I instituted a regime of regular cutting and feeding and I bought an electric lawn rake. And the lawn responded to all this TLC and I got rid of most of the moss and clover.

Last year of course, it all went backwards. Regular trips to Liverpool meant that the garden was neglected. But this year, I was going to recover the situation, until my lawn rake broke and I managed to electrocute myself trying to fix it.

Anyway, the clover is back, with a vengeance. Above is an example, the image made in a rush because I was just about to mow the lawn again. This meant that I broke my usual rule and made the image when the sun was out, which is how I achieved the high contrast that I like about it.


Sunday, 7 July 2013

Dad's Gone to Iceland


We've just returned from another weekend at my father's house in Liverpool - probably one of the last as the building work going on there is nearing completion. However, I made this image on the previous visit in early June. 

I don't know what it is with builders, but as soon as they move in your garden turns into a building site, no matter what they're actually doing, inside or out. These Icelandic poppies are growing everywhere amongst the other weeds and long grass at the back of the house. 

Anyway, I managed to take five minutes out to take this picture. I didn't bother to take my tripod with me so I had to shoot hand-held, hence the shallow depth of field. And I couldn't make it into an acceptable monochrome image, despite concerted efforts, so I present it here in all its full-colour glory.  Nevertheless, I'm reasonably pleased with the result.

Tuesday, 2 July 2013

Return of the Osteospermum


As promised, a return to posting my garden photography.

I was fairly happy with the image of an osteospermum that I posted a few weeks ago. However I didn't have a satisfactory image of a whole flower, so one evening I decided to return to the subject.

Anyway, you may remember that I mentioned that the osteospermum grow in pots on the west side of the house. When I got round there, the sun had already set, or at least dropped behind the White Horse (ah, the romance of it!) and the flowers had closed.

I made a few images anyway, the one above being the most successful. I still don't have the image I was after, so I'll probably have another go round this before the end of the season.