View allAll Photos Tagged canna

Indisches Blumenrohr 'Tropicana'

Canna indica 'Tropicana'

Meyer-Optic Gorlitz Trioplan 1:2.9/50 Exakta mount adapted to M42

250709-KPKP6350-2

Actually it doesn’t belong to the family of true lilies.

Went out after an evening thunderstorm and took a few photos - this was my favorite water drops shot.

Mine always bloom in August, that means fall is on the way. I'm ready for cooler weather

Morning at Magnolia Cemetery Mobile Alabama.

Longwood Gardens Pa.

 

Many thanks to all who take the time to view, comment and fave my images. Enjoy the day.

 

Soulis: Impression, Red Canna. Photo manipulation.

One from last summer, in the garden.

One of my canna starts has made a beautiful start indoors.

 

Sardegna Elmas (Città Metropolitana di Cagliari), in giardino finalmente dopo due anni è sbocciato il fiore della canna indica.

Thank you for your visits, kind comments and faves, very much appreciated.

Canna indica var. maculata blooms along an outcrop of basaltic rock near the Miradouro do Cedros in Flores. Also know as Indian shot, this native of South America and the Carribean was introduced in the Azores and has become naturalized in some areas.

Lens Info

MINOLTA AUTO ROKKOR-PF 1:1.4 f=58mm

+ MCEX-11 (11mm extender)

The Canna Lily is one of my favorite flowers to shoot.

 

I am not a "flower photographer", but I do enjoy the challenge of getting a good flower shot. And while I don’t always know what kind of flower I am shooting, on a good day, I can usually tell a rose from a daisy.

 

Flower Themes - Orange Flowers - Week 1012

P6240240

An attractively coloured canna photographed in Chiang Mai, Thailand.

Lens Info

MINOLTA MC MACRO ROKKOR 1:3.5 f=50mm

My canna lilies are in bloom now, but the Japanese beetles love them

Canna or canna lily is the only genus of flowering plants in the family Cannaceae, consisting of 10 species. It has been cultivated by Native Americans in tropical America for thousands of years and was one of the earliest domesticated plants in the Americas. The starchy root is edible. The plants are large tropical and subtropical perennial herbs with a rhizomatous rootstock. The broad, flat, alternate leaves that are such a feature of this plant, grow out of a stem in a long, narrow roll and then unfurl. The leaves are typically solid green, but some cultivars have glaucose, brownish, maroon, or even variegated leaves. 19619

Against a backdrop of a pond and Bamboo trees. This is a colour of Cannas I have never seen before. It's very nice.

Longwood Gardens Pa.

 

Many thanks to all who take the time to view, comment and fave my images. Enjoy the day.

Red Canna Lily (Canna indica) Flowers

Canna Leaf, macro Monday, macro

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