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Another image of a Blood Root bud I took while wildflower hunting in South Carolina. Last week we found many flowers but this week very few.
Shot with my Nikon D850 and Lensbaby Velvet 85 with a +4 and +2 close-up filters. Aperture at f/16 shot against a foam board texture from the Kathleen Clemons collection.
Thanks for viewing my photos. Comments are always welcome.
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Copyright Reid Northrup, 2021. All Rights Reserved, Worldwide. Please don't use my photos in any way without written permission.
Spent the morning with my buddy Louis shooting some wildflowers. Most of the wildflowers were gone but we hunted a bit and found a few to shoot. This is a blood root, which is a very tiny delicate flower. Given the brown background, I chose to place it against a texture by Kathleen Clemons.
We were greeted with some breeze, which for these flowers might have been a hurricane. But with a bit of patience and a high shutter speed I got some that were in focus.
This was shot with my D850 using a Lensbaby Velvet 85 fitted with +4 and +2 closeup filters. I believe this was shot at f/4.
Thanks for viewing my photos. Comments are always welcome.
================================
Copyright Reid Northrup, 2021. All Rights Reserved, Worldwide. Please don't use my photos in any way without written permission.
We still had some winter carrots in the ground, which should have been dug up by now with the frosts, but I managed to dig them up today. And yes, this is always amusing......
Root chicory (Cichorium intybus var. sativum) has been cultivated in Europe as a coffee substitute. The roots are baked, roasted, ground, and used as an additive, especially in the Mediterranean region
A Mexican Jay surveys for acorns from the exposed roots of an oak tree in the Chisos Basin Of Big Bend National Park.
Aka Corallorhiza maculara
Photographed 1:1 early in the morning to avoid any breeze, but it was darker and turned out there was some movement, so removed the worst shots from stack, still had 38.
Amazing how depth of field is reduced when very close with a macro lens.
detail from the exposed roots of trees along the ravine path leading down from Cedarvale into Toronto
Yucca root, also sometimes spelled "yuca," is known by the names manioc and cassava. Native to South America, this starchy tuber is eaten throughout Latin America, South Asia, the Caribbean and Africa. Used to make tapioca flour, yucca has a texture a little chewier than the potato and a milder taste. Rich in a range of nutrients, yucca can be used as a substitute in almost all of your favorite potato dishes.
Old Car Show - Wausau, Wisconsin
Another way to view my images is at: www.fluidr.com/photos/63888231%40N04/interesting
Star Wars: Jedi Fallen Order - Downsampled from ~20 MP, hotsampling! using SRWE; Universal UE4 Console Unlocker by Frans Bouma and Sunbeam; Camera tools by Frans Bouma with help from SkallEdit; ReShade
A long exposure of cascading water over an exposed root shows the strength of diversity of roots.
Woolly Hollow State Park, Arkansas. February, 2018.
Photo # KSA_6926bws1.
(c) Kelly Shipp Photography.
Tree root prying it's way into stone.
Developed in Caffenol CM using rosemary in place of the coffee.
Camera: Zeiss Ikon Super Ikonta III (531/16)
Lens: Carl Zeiss Tessar f/3.5 75 mm
Film: Fomapan Action 400 @ ISO 400
Exposure: 1/200 sec and f/16, hand-held
Film developed and scanned by Foto Brell, Bonn
Edited under Adobe Lightroom
In comparison with Ilford HP5 and Kodak Tri-X, scans of Fomapan Action 400 come from the film lab with somewhat higher contrast and a more distinct grain. Together with deep black and glowing highlights, this film can produce the beautiful and timeless look of classic film emulsions, quite different from digital rendering. Rating Fomapan 400 @ ISO 200 seems to be a good idea for the future to open up the shadows.