More effective outdoor flower photography
When you visit a garden or find a beautiful wildflower meadow it can often be a little overwhelming; so many flowers - where should you start? Keep in mind one main idea as you wander: eliminate distractions. Common distractions include that dead head you don’t notice, the lady in the background in a red jacket or the bin creeping into the frame on one side.
Get close
Search out one ideal flower and give it all your attention.
Scrupulously examine the rest of the frame for distractions.
Approach the flower like it is a person and you are making its portrait.
Include surroundings for context but don’t allow them to distract.
Use a large aperture for a shallow depth of field and selective focus.
Learn camera controls once and for all
Emma’s beginner’s camera course, A Year With My Camera, will have you confidently changing your apertures and shutter speeds in 6 weeks. It’s free by email. Join here and get started today:
Which aspect ratio?
Is your subject more suited to a landscape or a portrait aspect ratio? Or what about square? If you are hoping for a competition win don’t forget that judges traditionally prefer portrait for flowers and landscape for landscape.
Watch the weather
Wind: you’ll need a higher shutter speed. Let your ISO creep up as high as it needs to go.
Sun: watch out for hard shadows. Move yourself to cast a shadow over the flower if needed.
Rain: wipe the splashes off your lens regularly with a soft cloth designed for this job and keep your camera as dry as you can.
Don’t forget foliage
Leaves are beautiful too. Try positioning yourself so that you can get one branch in sharp focus with the rest of the tree behind providing a beautiful backdrop.
Try a black and white conversion to emphasise the shapes and form:
Flower photography online course
My online flower photography course is available year round but most people join in for the annual “official” run-through in June each year. Click here for more details.