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Macro 4 in exploring the bouquet. I have done macro before, but I realized they were always from a distance. This week I'm trying to get past that comfort zone of standing away.

Tags:

Purple Gladiolus "Flower Stalk" Pollen Stamens Pistil Stigma "Flower Morphology" "Flower Parts" Flowerpot Tucson Arizona "Southwestern USA" "American Southwest" America

 

IMG_0809 - Version 2

osculare vuol dire baciare.

 

tulip wonders

the solution for the focus is still not solved... these are all wet from the light rain we just had..I am somewhat challenged by this, and that IS why sometimes have filtered or art effected these flowers..... not that that is a bad thing, each is different.. Here it is a darkness and color as well as a focus " thing"

 

Thank you NJDodge and Buntekuh for comments on the previous dry-er version

You are what you are.

 

But you do get influenced by what's around you. Sometimes you blend in and sometimes you don't ...

Tags:

White "Sacred Datura" Flower "Flower Stalk" Pollen Stamens Pistil Stigma "Flower Morphology" "Flower Parts" Flowerpot Tucson Arizona "Southwestern USA" "American Southwest" America

 

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An extreme macro photograph of the corona of the small flower of Orbea carnosa ssp. keithii (a South African Stapeliad Desert flower).

 

Was Pachycymbium keithii before reclassification.

 

Martin

-

Administrator of:

Stapeliad & Asclepiad Group

All things beautiful in Nature Group

Succulent Treasures of the Desert Group

The World Up-Close (Nature Macro) Group

zelfs in het donkerste bos is er licht.

je moet het alleen maar willen zien.

These are so easy to grow from seed.

In my garden, Frankland, Western Australia.

One thing I miss about Great Falls, MT, are the sunsets! They are quite amazing, as this shot shows. This image was from our first night traveling through Great Falls on our way to Michigan in our motor home in 2014.

 

I didn't play with this much at all, and in fact, decreased the colors a little tiny bit because it look a bit fake.

 

Camera: Sony Nex-5t

Lens: FE PZ 16-50mm f/3.5-5.6 OSS

Shutter Speed: 1/80

Aperture: f/11

ISO: 400

July 2, 2021

 

We are in the middle of the wettest 4th of July weekend I can remember.... and it's cold too. I wandered around the back yard when there was a break in the drizzle. I like the way things look speckled with raindrops.

 

Daylilly - Autumn Red

(Hemerocallis)

 

Brewster, Massachusetts

Cape Cod - USA

 

Photo by brucetopher

© Bruce Christopher 2021

All Rights Reserved

 

...always learning - critiques welcome.

Tools: Canon 7D & iPhone 11.

No use without permission.

Please email for usage info.

History of

M. 'Mrs Jebb'

It has become clear, on phenotypic grounds, that the Crewdson hybrids gave rise to one outstanding and distinctive selection, now named M. 'Mrs Jebb'. We have found some information on its probable origin and naming. Mrs Jebb may have obtained what became M. 'Mrs Jebb' from a friend, Miss Dickson. The latter was a friend of Sir William Wright-Smith, Regius Keeper of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, and also was related to Jack Drake of Inshriach Nursery. Either may have given this fine blue poppy to Miss Dickson. Following Mrs Jebb's death in 1966, her property "Brooklands" in Dumfriesshire was purchased by Mr and Mrs McLaren. In about 1970, the garden was included in a National Trust tour of Dumfriesshire gardens and the late Mollie Sanderson was a member of the party. The McLarens gave her a piece of the blue poppy which she took home to Ireland and subsequently called Meconopsis 'Mrs Jebb'. Margaret and Henry Taylor then visited Mollie’s garden and were given a plant that they brought back to Scotland. In due course, the Taylors passed divisions on to James Cobb and others and in this way, M. 'Mrs Jebb' was distributed through Scotland and the north of England.

 

Info from: www.meconopsis.org/indivsp/MrsJebbCrewdson.html

Kubota Garden, Seattle.

Tulip Macro, made in our garden

Canon 300D with bellow and Pentacon 135/2,8, manual focus

Five stigma tower over the yellow stamen in this flower interior, catching their tiny pollen spores. Look closely and you can see these specks covering the focused stigma...

 

I'm not sure of the species of flower-- maybe Mallow??

 

www.bookwormgardens.org/

 

I wish I had been able to get a little more detail on the tiny little bug. But they are so small that they look kind of like a piece of dirt with the naked eye.

The stigma look so fuzzy!

Не только зелень можно найти в лесу, после дождя.

Лепесток и тычинка цветка на листе, в лесу на склоне горы Мащак, лето, день.

 

+ DHG Achromat macro 330 (+3)

This photo made it into Explore -thanks everyone!

 

All Canon gear: Xti (manual mode F16, 1/200, ISO 200) + 62mm of extension tubes + 100mm macro lens + 500D diopter. MR-14EX ring flash set to -1/3 FEC.

(112 pictures in 2012 #62 Petal(s))

Breathe, smile and be happy.

folded in your fleshy purse, i am floating once again

while the muted sounds are pumping rhythm

all the walls close in on me,

pressure's building wave on wave

'til the water breaks and outside i go

 

--growing up - peter gabriel

San Luis Obispo Botanic Garden,

San Luis Obispo, California

 

Trying to figure out this flower's structure: the widest pink straps are petals, the 4 lower dangly structures (plus one back to left) are stamens with anthers and the single purplish upright in the very center is a pistil and stigma. And those 4 more upright structures (plus one mostly hidden) with the red dots are staminodes (see adjacent photo for more details). Thanks to my botanist friend, Mike Bush, for helping me see this.

Portland, 13 May 2007

Tags:

White "Night Blooming Cereus" Cereus "Flower Stalk" Pollen Stamens Pistil Stigma "Flower Morphology" "Flower Parts" Flowerpot Tucson Arizona "Southwestern USA" "American Southwest" America

 

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