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Author Topic: ZZ- The Stone Rider - photographing plants  (Read 1890 times)

Stone Rider

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ZZ- The Stone Rider - photographing plants
« on: December 07, 2009, 11:09:09 PM »


PHOTOGRAPHING

  It is great pleasure to read in an international forum that my photographs are pretty.
 Thanks to all positive remarks because - as everybody- I need some support to continue in my process of evolution and to deliver better results in future.
 Mark Smyth is praising his divine NIKON tool and I think that the most substantial support of us is a modern superb camera. Because photographing plants is so important discipline for our hobby, I want to inform you about my own struggling path from the state of a beginner to an advanced one.

  First 20 years of my rock gardening I was not able to invest my money towards good camera and to buy expensive films. East German ORWO films, which had terrible colours, were our films in communist Czechoslovakia. When sister of Josef Jurasek bought him new Nikon camera I was surprised how it work nicely (it was in 1986, when we for the first time collected (at Ala Dag) Draba acaulis and Convolvulus compactus for the catalogue of Jim Archibald).
 After that, with a help of Rudi Weiss I bought second hand Pentax camera in Germany. The results were better but still with many mistakes.
The most spoiled films were with photographing white or yellow flowers in a limestone mountain. White objects are so much reflecting light that it is fooling cameras and the result are burned whites and ugly pale photos (you can see these burned photos even today as product of compact cameras).   Pictures were often not sharp enough.
One reason was that I needed my first spectacles!

 General improvement started in 2000 when Joyce Carruthers and me bought new SLR cameras in Las Vegas after some troubles in wilderness of Nevada. I bought new body of PENTAX and Joyce preferred CANON EOS REBEL. Later Joyce bought me new lens PENTAX 100mm Macro. Some of our slides were really good but again the amount of spoiled ones in mountains was tragically high (you must photograph in intensive noon light in Utah or Anatolia etc.)

 The end of our lost battles and the permanent stress of amateur photographer were in 2006 when Joyce bought digital SLR Canon EOS 400 and I bought the heavy-duty tripod. I just got my first personal computer from Prague Club of Rock Gardeners (as the new editor of Skalnicky) and I learned slowly how to ride this PC machine. But soon I master all the useful tricks with controlling whites in the camera and I loved plenty of the results!
What was not good enough I improved in Photoshop of Canon, Adobe or Picasa 3.

For permanently busy Joyce is easy to deal the duties: I am now the photographer and she is great lecturer.
 Last week I looked sadly at my Pentax 100mm Macro lens and decided to invest money and to buy digital body for it. I was lucky! The technicians of Pentax camera developed something really progressive so I bought expensive brand-new PENTAX 20K D which fits to my “older” lens and which shall do plenty great photographs for the oldie of my class.
Three samples (pictures of the new PENTAX 20K) are enclosed, but this superman’s camera need long study and practice.


Maggi says : click the photos to enlarge them
ZZ

mark smyth

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Re: ZZ- The Stone Rider - photographing plants
« Reply #1 on: December 07, 2009, 11:13:39 PM »
Hi ZZ! I now swear by my Canon 900Ti
Antrim, Northern Ireland Z8
www.snowdropinfo.com / www.marksgardenplants.com / www.saveourswifts.co.uk

When the swifts arrive empty the green house

All photos taken with a Canon 900T and 230

mark smyth

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Re: ZZ- The Stone Rider - photographing plants
« Reply #2 on: December 07, 2009, 11:17:53 PM »
ZZ it's good to read you are now in the digital age. Maybe we now have a good excuse to have Joyce visit us with you of course to give a lecture.
Antrim, Northern Ireland Z8
www.snowdropinfo.com / www.marksgardenplants.com / www.saveourswifts.co.uk

When the swifts arrive empty the green house

All photos taken with a Canon 900T and 230

Stone Rider

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Re: ZZ- The Stone Rider - photographing plants
« Reply #3 on: December 09, 2009, 12:28:47 PM »
  I must praise and give deep admiration to Mark Smyth for the pristine precise details of different cultivars of Galanthus in his web gallery. Canon is divine! Also, it is great skill to make lovely pictures in the middle of a jungle of pots and plants in overcrowded bulb house in Aberdeen!! I think that photographing as a kind of the sport is to hike long and high to reach some desirable plant and fight with strong wind, cold, rain (too strong sun), trembling hands and asthma. Photographing as a yoga is to take different asana in the treachery terrain of rock gardens (killing some plants around) and practice pranayama with your breath.
 I provide you with 2 photos showing sport and yoga.
First is  Joyce Carruthers is balancing on slippery ledge under the volcano Mt. Lassen (California), which last erupted in 1915,
 second is  Richard Barlett (president of NARGS) is rolling my darlings (plants) in Karlík (photo by David Furguson from Calgary).
The third photo is showing the practice to stay during “a bus visit” in the garden alone (people are waiting for you in the bus) so your picture (which one soon!!) is undisturbed.  Love to everybody who appreciates our (Maggi and Zdenek) effort to please you.


maggi says click the picture to enlarge them.....
« Last Edit: December 09, 2009, 12:31:16 PM by Stone Rider »
ZZ

ranunculus

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Re: ZZ- The Stone Rider - photographing plants
« Reply #4 on: December 09, 2009, 12:36:23 PM »
Your humour and your lovely images are really appreciated ZZ.
Cliff Booker
Behind a camera in Whitworth. Lancashire. England.

cohan

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Re: ZZ- The Stone Rider - photographing plants
« Reply #5 on: December 09, 2009, 06:16:49 PM »
the photos are great to see, and i'm sure most of us can relate to the struggles trying to record the plants we see so that we can share them with others! a vita part of the hobby :)

 


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