December 10, 2023
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This entry was posted on December 10, 2023 by Linda Grashoff. It was filed under Nature, Photography, Study and was tagged with dead leaves, hosta, Kendal at Oberlin, surfaces.
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Brilliant set! You captured the true beauty of those leaves, Linda! Nr2 is my fav, with that vertical and horizontal part. Have a nice Sunday!
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December 10, 2023 at 2:59 AM
Thank you, Harrie. I’m glad you like these. They are a departure for me. I usually don’t process my photographs as much as I did these.
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December 10, 2023 at 12:55 PM
A post after my own heart. Wonderful shots, Linda. Your framing and focus is spot on in every shot. #3 and #10 are favorites but I could change my mind any time because they are all so nice. Well done.
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December 10, 2023 at 11:34 AM
Thanks, Ken. The focus is not quite what it may seem. Yes, I did focus on the prominent leaf in each photograph. But the blurriness and darkness of the backgrounds are all in the processing. I had a lot of fun doing these. Thank you, Photoshop and Lightroom.
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December 10, 2023 at 12:59 PM
As a fellow leaf fan, the character in each of these is great. What a wonderful variety of shapes.
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December 10, 2023 at 1:25 PM
Thanks, Anonymous. I see these leaves as having character, too.
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December 10, 2023 at 7:53 PM
Harrie said it: Brilliant set! I think so too. Hostas are wonderful even in their impermanence, aren’t they?
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December 10, 2023 at 8:20 PM
Thank you, Mic. Yes, they are. So glad I live close enough to these (I walk past them every day at least once) that I can catch them at what I think of as their peak.
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December 10, 2023 at 9:58 PM
It’s understandable how the surfaces, contours, and textures of these dry leaves would have attracted you. Number 8 could almost pass for a mountain landscape.
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December 10, 2023 at 10:03 PM
I like your idea of a mountain landscape better than the idea of a dinosaur, which a friend suggested. Thanks for writing, Steve.
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December 10, 2023 at 10:29 PM
What an astonishing eye you have, Linda–to see in a dead hosta leaf a magical, colorful sculpture!
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December 11, 2023 at 10:33 AM
Thanks, Marjorie. Sculpture is a good word for what I see. I think you get what I’m after. As I wrote in “Matter Matters” (in the menu at the top of this page): “When I photograph, I pursue the sheer corporeal existence of things. I aim to affirm and illustrate the substance of matter, so attributes like line, color, and texture interest me more than the overall scene or object photographed. I purposely forsake imparting a sense of scale or a metaphorical message. It is the pure beauty of matter that moves me.”
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December 11, 2023 at 10:45 AM
I should have added to my third sentence, “except for the magical part.” 😉
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December 11, 2023 at 11:47 AM
We were at a garden in Vancouver Friday morning looking at lichens on a Japanese cherry tree. Under the tree were Hostas that looked like these. I told my friend Richard, who’s an accomplished photographer, about your Hosta photos – and here they are! Perfect, thank you. 😉 You have really outdone yourself here. Each one’s a small masterpiece. I like them all but #7 has a heavier substance, a physicality that is intriguing – plus it floats in the air, which makes it more interesting. #’s 1 & 3 vie for favorites along with #7 though. And #2 brings a sense of unreality that stopped my eyes in their tracks. But #4 – also beautiful. And then there’s #10. Hmmm. Hostahappiness!
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December 12, 2023 at 9:43 PM
Yay! You like them! I was hoping. These took a lot of (joyful) work. After I did just about everything I could in Lightroom, I took the photos into Photoshop. There I selected each main leaf, inverted the selection, then darkened and blurred the background. I also cloned out some distractions and used the newish Photoshop tool called Content Aware Fill to get rid of other distractions. Then I took them back in to Lightroom and did more touch up. I wasn’t sure the artificiality of the final product would appeal to you. Since I found #7 the least interesting, I’m happy that you found it the most interesting. Glad I included it. This morning we had some sun, and I took the camera over to the hostas again. Haven’t downloaded yet, but I’m pretty sure there are some goodies there. Thanks, Lynn.
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December 12, 2023 at 10:14 PM
I select the subject, invert, and work on the background pretty often, but in LR. You know I have no problem with that. The artificiality of these is beautifully balanced – they’re taking center stage but the context is still there (though it doesn’t always have to be there, IMHO). #7 isn’t as interesting a shape as the others but the details on the surface are fascinating – it really looks like a landscape. I’m glad you did the extra work and enjoyed it…hope you found more in the sun Tuesday, whether hostas or other subjects.
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December 14, 2023 at 1:16 PM
Lightroom wouldn’t have found the subject in most of these; there was a lot of stuff, including other, nearby, hosta leaves that would probably have been selected. I did make a version of #1 with the background totally black but wound up preferring the wee bit of background. You’ve given me an idea, though. If I made the background totally black, I could make the dimensions of the photograph uniform. I think. A friend said she’d love to see all the photos in this series at once on a wall, and uniformity would be better for that kind of presentation. Now to find a venue. Or not. Even though we had sun Monday, when I was out with the camera, just about everything I saw was brown. (Except the hostas, which were much whiter.) Am trying to make brown interesting with dodging and burning and adding vibrance and contrast and anything else I can think of.
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December 14, 2023 at 4:51 PM
It’s a brown time of year, isn’t it? 🙂 And gray. Have you used color grading? E.g. select highlights, choose a hue – a warm one would be logical – saturate it a little, and dial the luminance up a little. For the midtones, sometimes I don’t use any color but I might increase or decrease the luminance. For shadows it can be logical to choose a purplish blue, saturate a little, and dial the luminance down. Then blend them all (in blending) and see whether dialing the luminance up, down, or leaving it at 50% is best. It can really add life to images that are a little drab.
I should try PS the next time LR is having a hard time finding a subject.
I linked to your site and this post in an email to my friend Richard, the lichenologist. I think he’ll love the iron bacteria and dumpster photos. 🙂
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December 14, 2023 at 8:03 PM
I have not used color grading. Thanks for the tips; I’ll try it. I should have said that I selected the leaves in Photoshop with the Quick Selection tool. Tell Richard that the latest issue of Sierra magazine has a page on lichens.
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December 14, 2023 at 8:29 PM