I don’t normally do this here on Weekly Fifty, but this week’s image is the first in a two-part series of directly connected images that build on one another in a very linear sense. I’m sharing this photo first because I took it first, and then next week I’ll post the follow-up as an illustration of how even in the span of a few minutes, learning and growth are possible. Maybe even essential. And hopefully this one-two combination will serve as an example and, perhaps, even a bit of inspiration.
I took this photo while I was out walking around the OSU campus one chilly afternoon, Nikon D750 and 105mm macro lens in hand, on a quick break from work. (I really don’t take breaks in the traditional sense, such as the ol’ two 15’s and a Lunch that I was allowed back at the grocery store in college, but I do like to go on a walk every now and then to clear my mind and do a bit of a mental reset. And those walks are best enjoyed with a camera…) I saw this relatively unassuming cluster of four leaves jutting out from the plant from whence it came, and thought about how I might capture an interesting photo of it. After a couple of tries I realized the key that was missing: backlighting. Instead of putting the sun behind me, I repositioned myself with the sun overhead and in front of me and, as a result, behind the leaves. That one little maneuver made all the difference, and entirely transformed not just the subject but the entire composition.
Immediately the leaves went from dull to radiant, and the rest of the composition was transformed from rather dull, normal, and mostly uninteresting to a brilliant collection of light and shadow with a bit of foreground elements to add a sense of perspective and depth and dimension. I used an aperture of f/6.7 which I could have easily stopped down to f/8 to make the subject even sharper but it works well enough as-is. I put the leaves right in the center to immediately draw your eye, which is classic Weekly Fifty also. It’s a formula, but it works, and I like to use it :)
Still, even though a lot of this shot worked, there were some things that just didn’t. Even though from a technical perspective it gets the job done, from an artistic standpoint it’s just kind of…unfulfilling. But that’s where I’ll leave things, and to finish the story you’ll have to come back next week :)



