"Pay attention to the world." -- Susan Sontag
 

Orange Double Daylilies (1 of 2)

From “Hemerocallis Fulva” in The Heirloom Flower Garden: Rediscovering and Designing with Classic Ornamentals by Jo Ann Gardner:

“The Orange or Tawny Daylily is a vigorous species with large flowers about 5 inches across — orange with darker zones and stripes in shades of red and mahogany — giving the effect of a tawny color, preserved in the Latin epithet fulva….

“In Asia, where Daylilies have been cultivated for thousands of years, they are regarded as a source of food and medicine. The flowers are picked fresh and fried in batter or dried and used to thicken soups. Preparations from the plant are used to relieve jaundice and dropsy and to reduce fever and pain….

“In Europe and the New World, the Daylily has always been cultivated for its beauty alone.
The Lemon Yellow was a special favorite in English cottage gardens. Both the Orange and Yellow Daylily were brought to the New World during the 17th century and widely cultivated across the land. The more vigorous Orange Daylily remains a faithful signpost to many heirloom plant collectors, who know that where it grows, an old garden cannot be far away.

“Until the late 19th century, only these two species were grown in America. By 1860 a double form of the Orange — crowded with petals — was introduced from Japan, where it had been noticed by European travelers since about 1712…. In 1897 a new Orange, ‘Maculata’, was added to the pool of Daylilies, offering later bloom and larger flowers with a deep bronze patch on each petal….

“By the 1920s, America had become the leading center for hybridization, the goal being the creation of ever-new types with larger flowers of diverse forms — wavy, frilled petals, for instance — an expanded color range, and a longer blooming period. The old Orange, naturalized along roadsides across the country, was one of the leading contributors to the breeding process….”


Hello!

This is another one of my favorite daylilies to photograph at Oakland Cemetery — which is probably something I can say about all the daylilies that I’ve ever photographed as well as those I haven’t photographed yet, but will.

It’s been three years since I dwelled with this particular batch of flowers. The last time was in 2022 (see Summer Daylilies (2 of 3): Double-Double Orange-Orange), when I determined that they were a double form of a more common yellow/orange daylily called Hemerocallis fulva.

Here’s where they live:

This is an especially distinctive space among the many distinctive spaces throughout Oakland Cemetery, notable for much more than the orange double daylilies standing tall at the back. When I took this photograph, the steel chain was in place to discourage entry; but in the past, it’s been accessible (note how there’s a rust stain on the top step, where they chain often sets) so I’ve walked up the steps and sat on the stone bench at the right of the photo.

From that position, the space demonstrates how it’s so unique. The use of grass throughout the space is unusual; and that, along with the placement of shrubs and trees around the edges, creates a sense of visual and auditory isolation from the rest of the property. That your sight is contained within its boundaries, and external sounds are effectively muffled to near silence, actually mirrors the design of the entire cemetery, with its acreage surrounded by hefty brick walls that separate you from the busy streets outside. It’s like a microcosm of the rest of the cemetery, one with its own independent architecture. And that architecture includes the use of plants whose appearance will vary with the seasons, since much of the greenery you see here will exhibit rich fall color in October and November.

Many of the designed plots at Oakland Cemetery contain elaborate sculptured memorials — statues, mausoleums, or other structures representing the people memorialized there and aspects of their lives. Note, however, this one contains only a single memorial stone (right in front of the daylilies) — which doesn’t necessarily convert the square into a straightforward garden, but suggests that its designers favored the creation of a contemplative space rather than a simple (or even complex) memorial. From the bench, there’s a sense of peace that unfolds while you sit there — one that is still quite powerful even if you can only observe it from the outside.

Some of the irises I photographed for my iris project made an appearance here a few weeks earlier, their remnants visible among the green leaves surrounding the daylilies. This daylily cultivar may have been bred to increase its height (while doubling its petal production), as some of its stems extend nearly four feet above ground. This was convenient for The Photographer, who — unwilling to jump the chain and invade the space (this time anyway) — used a zoom lens from outside positions to get a closer look at the flowers.

With a zoom lens and limited sight lines, I had to take whatever lighting conditions I could get, which meant that some of the flowers had a lot of sunlight on them when I took their pictures. The effect — which I didn’t notice until I got home — was that the saturated orange from the flowers combined with the yellow that is natural to sunlight caused the flower petals to act like reflectors casting yellow and orange throughout the entire scene. The effect is similar to results you could intentionally achieve in a photography studio, using a yellow or gold reflector to bounce light from the reflector onto your subject.

This level of warmth in an image of orange flowers isn’t necessarily wrong, nor is it uncommon. See, for example, all these images of double orange daylilies that display similar colors throughout the subjects and backgrounds. But I knew — from what we like to call “real life” — that while the stone behind the flower could have been that sandy brown color, it wasn’t. Much of the stone near these flowers was typical of Oakland Cemetery’s stonework: it’s gray to very light blue, with textures that alternate between the two colors. The leaves, too, didn’t seem quite correct; they should have been a more unadulterated green than the yellow-green in this image.

So these two characteristics of the image told me that some color correction was appropriate, to more accurately represent the colors that I saw. In this case, only a simple white balance adjustment coupled with reducing orange and yellow saturation a smite or two was necessary to remove the color cast, clarify the colors, and create better contrast between the blue-gray stone, the green leaves, and the star of the scene: the daylily’s rich orange.

When I last photographed these daylilies in 2022, this was the only family of them on the property. This year, however, I subsequently stumbled across another colony whose flowers were close to eye level and weren’t visitor-inhibited. That enabled me to get some much closer shots of individual flower blossoms and a few photogenic groupings, which I’ll feature in the next post.

Thanks for reading and taking a look!











Pink Daylilies and Magenta Colors

From “Color in the Daylily Flower” in The Illustrated Guide to Daylilies by Oliver Billingslea:

“Color is evaluated by the visual sense of light reflected or transmitted by the flower. The term hue is the specific or family name of a color; value is the lightness or darkness of a color; and intensity refers to the brightness or dullness of a color.

“Modern hybrid daylilies have a remarkably diverse color range, especially considering that the wild types from which they have been bred were found only in shades of yellow, orange, fulvous (dull reddish-yellow), and rosy-fulvous. Today, the only colors notably lacking are pure white and pure blue — colors which hybridizers are avidly pursuing.

“The outer portion of the segments, excluding any contrasting edging, is considered the basic color of the flower. The present color range of daylilies includes yellow in all shades from palest lemon, through bright yellow and gold, to orange; red in diverse shades of scarlet, carmine, tomato red, maroon, wine reds, and blackish reds; pink from pale pink through rose pink to rose red; purple from pale lavender and lilac to deep grape or violet; and melon, from palest cream shades to peach to deep cantaloupe.

“Some colors appear to require the presence of genes for two basic colors; for examples, shades of buff, brown, apricot, and peach are thought to be variations of pink + yellow. Near-whites are found among the palest tints of yellow, pink, lavender, or melon. The actual pigments which produce the colors still need research, as does color inheritance.

“The center area of the flower is called the throat. In most daylilies the throat area differs in color from the rest of the flower. Usually it is a shade of green, yellow, gold, orange, apricot, or melon. It can be very small and narrow or it can reach far up on the segments. The very center of the throat is sometimes referred to as the heart and may be a different color; for example, a yellow-throated daylily may have a green heart.”


Hello!

This is one of my favorite daylilies to photograph at Oakland Cemetery, and I’ve gone back every late May or early June for several years to hunt down this particular variety just to take pictures of it again. “Hunt down” may be a slight exaggeration, since it’s easy to find — it’s one of the first flowers to be seen just inside the cemetery’s main gate.

This daylily contains one of the purest examples of the color magenta that I’ve found among those flowers I photograph, many of which appear to be magenta but are actually variations of light red (trending toward pink), or blends of orange and red. When editing photos of magenta flowers like this in Lightroom, you have very little magenta color saturation to work with, partly because it’s not a primary color (like red or blue) with a large number of varying shades or hues. If you try to decrease magenta saturation directly, the magenta will quickly turn nearly white; and if you try to increase its saturation, you’ll end up with a garish pink color that nobody wants to see. To effect accurate perceptual saturation of magenta, you instead alter the primary red and/or primary blue color channels, using Lightroom’s Color Calibration function. Similar (yet less subtle) results can be achieved by increasing contrast, increasing blacks, or decreasing whites — all of which make the image darker overall but also yield the illusion that magenta has become more saturated, with some loss of smooth transitions between shades of magenta, pink, and red.

It’s a fascinating flower to photograph and edit because of these special characteristics of magenta, given its petals are almost entirely magenta with some red tones, especially at each petal’s edges. This combination is one that our cameras and processing programs detect quite precisely, but we tend to interpret more simply, as the color pink. This shorthand approach serves us well, since magenta is a blend of equal parts blue and red, yet there’s no visible color wavelength called “magenta” in the physics of color. These two principles are observable in Lightroom: if you increase either the saturation of primary red or primary blue, the magenta color in these petals intensifies by about the same amount. And if you decrease primary red saturation and increase primary blue saturation by the same relative amounts (say -100% red and +100% blue), you arrive at exactly the same magenta color you started with.

Yet in natural light, even magenta’s limited saturation range responds quite differently to sunlight versus shade. Note how the left image below — taken when the sun was out — looks so different from the image on the right, taken when the sun went behind the clouds. The effect of additional sunlight actually mimics decreasing saturation in Lightroom: some of the magenta color shifts toward very light pink or even white because of the floodlighting effect of the sun, while the shaded version retains the saturation that was evident in the flowers in real life.

This is not to say that the version on the left is more accurate than the one on the right. Both are correct but reflect different lighting conditions, even if one version might be more appealing to some people than the other. I typically prefer images like the one on the right — taken in the shade — because I like the color rendition better, but, more importantly, limited sunlight reveals all the color and texture variations the flower presents. The flower’s minute details aren’t overpowered by the sun and color contrasts (like those of the yellow throat and the green heart) are much more precise. Especially with daylilies, though, you can’t wait too long for your favored lighting conditions, because the plant always lives up to its name, and its flowers disappear in a day!

Thanks for reading and taking a look!