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You’ve probably heard me say on more than one occasion that we don’t get a lot of snow here in Oklahoma. Well, none that sticks around anyway. Every now and then we’ll wake up to a serene scene of the grass covered in a blanket of white, but it usually lasts about one or two days before melting away. That was the case the case a few days before this photo was taken, and it fit the pattern quite nicely. Snow started on a Thursday afternoon and continued until late into the night, so the next morning the whole town kind of shut down. I spent so much time outside with my kids sledding, throwing snowballs, and just messing around that I didn’t take a single picture of the snow at all. Not that I regretted it; I was just more focused on my family rather than my camera. Gotta have priorities, right?
A couple of days later I brought my camera to work, as I often do, and went for a walk around Theta Pond to clear my head after four back-to-back Zoom meetings just to be out in nature but also to see if I could get any good photos. Much to my surprise, a not insignificant portion of the water surface was still frozen even though the rest of campus showed no signs of snow whatsoever. It had long since melted, but the frozen pond persisted, which meant I was able to get the shot you see here. It’s a magnolia leaf resting, not floating, on the water with some cypress leaves surrounding it. I couldn’t get very close and all I had was my D750 and 105mm macro lens, so I did end up cropping the composition a bit, but the distance afforded me the luxury of shooting at a pretty wide aperture–something I don’t often do with my macro lens especially when taking pictures of super close subjects.
There wasn’t much I could do to control anything here other than the angle from which I took the photo and the aperture I used. I couldn’t move myself or the leaf much because I didn’t want to actually set foot on the ice, but even so I’m quite happy with how this turned out. The foremost edge of the leaf is pretty sharp, there’s a nice interplay of light and shadow to add an interesting amount of contrast, and if you look closely you’ll see some subtle clues that the leaf is not, in fact, resting on liquid but on ice. It was a fun photo to take and an interesting one to look at visually, and though I’m sure the pond has long since melted I’m going to keep my eyes open for future photo opportunities like this one.