42 favorites     30 comments    565 visits

1/100 f/11.0 100.0 mm ISO 100

Canon EOS 5D Mark III

EXIF - See more details

See also...

Pictures for Pam Pictures for Pam


Snow & Ice Snow & Ice


100 Percent Perfect 100 Percent Perfect


Tolerance Tolerance


The Four Seasons The Four Seasons


Holy Macro! Holy Macro!


Ipernity Addicts Ipernity Addicts


I ♥ Nature I ♥ Nature


Master and Muse Master and Muse


NATURE ❤ SANCTUARY NATURE ❤ SANCTUARY


The World of Nature The World of Nature


Foto - à la carte Foto - à la carte


Nature and Us Nature and Us


Canon EOS xxx Canon EOS xxx


La Nature La Nature


Blanc Blanc


1st. Class Macro 1st. Class Macro


beautiful photo's beautiful photo's


NATURE!! NATURE!!


Macro Macro


See more...

Keywords

macro
snow
bokeh
acorn
filter
Pictures for Pam


Authorizations, license

Visible by: Everyone
All rights reserved

565 visits


Pictures for Pam, Day 96: Snowy Acorns

Pictures for Pam, Day 96: Snowy Acorns
{+6 insets!}

Photography is a bottomless pit of learning opportunities. We are constantly reminded that it's easy to make mistakes but it's also easy to learn from them too.

A few days ago I went out to take pictures of the snow that blanketed everything on our property. I brought my flash attachment and had a lovely time finding fun subjects with snowy hats or otherwise adorned with snowy fluff.

I have lately been swapping between my macro flash settings and my aperture priority settings and if I'm not paying attention I will end up with dozens of garbage pictures. Like I did the other day. *groan* When I'm in my usual set-up, aperture priority, I use my index finger to raise or lower the F-stop. I take sets of pictures with a range of apertures so I automatically do this as I roam around. However, if I'm in manual mode, for flash images, that same index finger movement switches the speed, not the aperture. If I'm not paying attention, I'll take a set of pictures and what I end up getting are a bunch at the same F-stop but at different speeds, and therefore blown out or too dark. AKA: junk. The way to adjust the aperture in manual mode is with my thumb on a radial dial on the back. Once again, if I'm not paying attention, I'll use my thumb to adjust aperture when I'm in aperture priority and that adjusts light balance...to the tune of +4 exposure compensation...which, once again, equals junk pictures. Sometimes I can recover enough detail in one of those pictures that it's ok to use but there's no getting around the fact that the whites are blown out.

I am especially annoyed with myself because I got lots of really neat pictures of wasp galls, acorns and oak leaves with snow balanced precariously on top. Almost all of these pictures are disasters. It's not like it snows on a regular basis around here so I'm pretty unhappy about this. Granted, the bites that really hurt remind me not to do that again but the pictures are still garbage. I am going to see if any of these pictures are savable. We'll see. I'll finish this post later and let you see what I come up with.

Well, I managed to get some nice pictures from the pile of +4 exposure compensation monstrosities! Some turned out better than others but I'm pretty surprised that I was able to recover any of them at all. Most of these pictures were almost WHITE from careless overexposure. However, since I use RAW image format, I can recover a lot of detail. It's not a miracle worker--if something's totally blown out or too dark, there's no way to add detail if there isn't any at all--but It can be astonishing the power you get with more pixels to work with. I needed to work on the backgrounds and make sure the subjects were properly lit to the best of my ability. I know a couple are kind of "meh" but I am happy with what I came up with. :) (Of course, this means that we will get several days of lovely snow falling where I can retake all of these pictures properly…if I didn't try to fix these, it would never snow again until we moved! MURPHY'S LAW! HA!!)

I am sharing six insets to go along with the main image--a pair of acorns that decided they didn't want to fall from the tree! In case you were wondering, the background has been replaced!

Pam, as I've been wandering around in your archives, I find myself extremely attracted to your collages. From where I sit, it looks like you sometimes begin with an image that's too busy but it's got a lovely subject. So then you get to work with artistically messing with the surrounding area to soften the busy aspects, and then you add more pictures to create a truly beautiful display. I love that you aren't willing to abandon an image just because it has some challenges, and that's what I did with my pictures today too! :) I hope your day is going as well as can be! *BIG HUGGGGGS*

Explored on 2/13/19, highest placement, #2.

, Sami Serola (inactive), Ulrich John, Susanne Hoy and 38 other people have particularly liked this photo


30 comments - The latest ones
 Dinesh
Dinesh club
Thanks for the post ~ I love the "write"
5 years ago.
 William Sutherland
William Sutherland club
Awesome winter shots!

Admired in:
www.ipernity.com/group/tolerance
5 years ago.
 uwschu
uwschu club
schöne Winterserie, solche Motive habe ich dieses Jahr so gut wie nicht.
Angenehmen Tag für Dich
5 years ago.
 neira-Dan
neira-Dan club
Quelle belle série
5 years ago.
 ©UdoSm
©UdoSm club
Well seen and done...
5 years ago.
 Gudrun
Gudrun club
A wonderland of winter details, all of them gorgeous macros!
5 years ago.
 Ruesterstaude
Ruesterstaude club
Wieder eine wunderschöne Serie von Makros, Janet!
5 years ago.
 Jaap van 't Veen
Jaap van 't Veen club
Great find(s) and great photography.
5 years ago.
 Ko Hummel
Ko Hummel club
a beautiful collection of winter pictures. great
5 years ago.
 Boro
Boro
Superbe
5 years ago.
 John Cass
John Cass
Wonderful image, excellent PiP's
5 years ago.
 Stormlizard
Stormlizard club
Acorns, food for Eastern grey tree squirrels and not to forget 'Scrat* from Ice Age..

Nice photos Janet.
5 years ago. Edited 5 years ago.
 Annemarie
Annemarie club
superb again Janet!
5 years ago.
 Zulma
Zulma
If you move the pointer very fast through the insets, what a trip my dear Pod Sister. Well, that's what I did. What a wonderful wonderful experience you have in your shootings...I would love to be there to watch your enjoyment with photography and all the planning you do. A real learning experinece my friend. Huge hug!! and a smile back at you.
5 years ago.
 tiabunna
tiabunna club
A lovely main image and an interesting series of PiPs, Janet. I found your notes interesting and the theme familiar, with a few variations, to my own experiences. I guess we all have bad days, but you have done a great job of retrieval here and yes, RAW is certainly the way to maximise the options.
5 years ago. Edited 5 years ago.
 Cämmerer zu Nau
Cämmerer zu Nau club
Wunderschöne, gekonnte Makro- Aufnahmen.
5 years ago.
 Keith Burton
Keith Burton club
I really like this image...............the little acorn sitting in it's basket with it's conjoined twin hanging underneath is so cute..........especially with the coating of snow which really makes them stand out from the background.

The PiPs have all turned out pretty well............I especially like the ones with the oak leaves (PiP No 3 is excellent).

With regards to your disappointment in getting lots of junk images............it's not too bad when you think back to the days before digital cameras. Taking a whole roll of photos, sending it off in an envelope to be developed, waiting two weeks - and THEN getting a pile of junk..!!
5 years ago.
 Nicole Merdrignac
Nicole Merdrignac club
Superbe photo d'hiver avec notes. Nicole.
5 years ago.
 cammino
cammino club
Wonderful perfect close-ups!
5 years ago.
 @ngélique ❤️
@ngélique ❤️ club
splendide Janet *********comme d'habitude c'est parfait j'adore *
5 years ago.
 Boarischa Krautmo
Boarischa Krautmo club
beautiful oak studies!
5 years ago.
 Dominique 60
Dominique 60 club
un bel ensemble !!
5 years ago.
 Jenny McIntyre
Jenny McIntyre club
What beautiful photographs Janet - I know I shouldn't say it, but it pleases me to hear that you too make mistakes like me, yet you take incredible photographs compared to mine. That is the beauty isn't it - being able to take loads of photos, just in case you manage to capture one superbly? This digital age is amazing - we can take as many pictures as we want and can delete them if they're no good, leaving more space for more pictures. I remember taking my first pictures with a manual 35mm SLR - the first camera that I was able to adjust the lens and F11 etc. Of course I had to wait a week for the film to be processed and photographs sent back to me and it was a gorgeous mistake of mine, as I had dropped the contrast and the sunset picture came back with beautiful colours and contrasts. Nowadays I don't have to wait. It's wonderful
5 years ago.
 Pam J
Pam J club
LOVE THE SNOW CAPPED ACORN
I ACTUALLU LOVE MAKING THE GRAPHICS
5 years ago.
 Doug Shepherd
Doug Shepherd club
A wonderful series Janet, such a pleasure to view. Thanks for posting.
5 years ago.
 Adriana Grecu
Adriana Grecu
Si beau, si délicate!!
5 years ago.
 Rosalyn Hilborne
Rosalyn Hilborne club
Terrific shots of winter leaves and snow Janet. I love this series!
5 years ago.
 trester88
trester88 club
Eine wunderbare Serie zum Thema "Der Winter geht"!
Leider haben wir dieses Jahr in Norddeutschland keinen richtigen Winter und kaum Schnee :-(
5 years ago.
 Susanne Hoy
Susanne Hoy
Such a beautiful winter series. The ice crystals enchants the leaves, acorns and wasp galls. I like the insets of the wasp galls best. The first one looks like a Halloween lantern and the second one looks like a Christmas tree ball.
5 years ago.
 Trudy Tuinstra
Trudy Tuinstra club
it are great fragile winterpictures from the oak
5 years ago.

Sign-in to write a comment.