Tag: closeup photography
Found Flowers (Set 3 of 3): Captivating Canna
The gallery below contains photos of a canna lily from my garden, the last of three galleries of reprocessed images from my archives.
The first set in this series is here: Found Flowers (Set 1 of 3): Marvelous Mandevilla.
The second set is here: Found Flowers (Set 2 of 3): Luscious Lantana.
Here are links to earlier posts containing some of the other “found photos” I recently reprocessed:
Wordless Wednesday: Five Found Flower Photos
Before and After: Tiny Bubbles
Wordless Wednesday: Hibiscus, Hibiscus, Bug
Thanks for taking a look!
Found Flowers (Set 2 of 3): Luscious Lantana
Hello! The gallery below contains lantana photos, the second of three galleries of reprocessed images from my archives.
The first set in this series is here: Found Flowers (Set 1 of 3): Marvelous Mandevilla.
Here are links to earlier posts containing some of the other “found photos” I recently reprocessed:
Wordless Wednesday: Five Found Flower Photos
Before and After: Tiny Bubbles
Wordless Wednesday: Hibiscus, Hibiscus, Bug
Thanks for taking a look!
Found Flowers (Set 1 of 3): Marvelous Mandevilla
“Mandevilla” …. the word just rolls off your tongue, doesn’t it? I’ve previously posted pictures from a folder I recently found in my photo archives, of plants from my garden taken about ten years ago, resurrected and reprocessed with Lightroom and the Nik Collection. I’ve grouped the remaining photos into three galleries — this one, of mandevilla, that I’m posting today; and second and third galleries of a canna lily and additional lantana that I’ll post in the next few days.
This mandevilla variation was a Sun Parasol White Mandevilla, known for its giant blooms, large leaves, and rapidly growing vine. As you can see from the photos, the flower buds start out as mostly white with pink tint, then open to reveal a bright yellow center surrounded by white and a diminished pink frost. Mandevilla variants available to me locally are normally annual, so I buy at least a couple new ones each year, varying colors among white, pink, and red — the colors I typically find at garden centers nearby. Occasionally, if the winter months are warm enough, the mandevilla will return for one extra spring, a bonus I usually embrace by repotting the plant … and buying a couple more!
Here are links to the previous posts containing some of the “found photos” from my archives:
Wordless Wednesday: Five Found Flower Photos
Before and After: Tiny Bubbles
Wordless Wednesday: Hibiscus, Hibiscus, Bug
Thanks for taking a look!