Spring draba is a new wildflower for me, identified with Picture This iPhone app. A line of these flowers, < 1" tall, appeared today in the crevasse between the concrete of the garage threshold and the paving stones of the driveway. These are tiny. The large blossom is just under 5mm diameter.
Spring draba is considered a weed and is native to southern Oregon where we now live. I guess “weed” means a plant which is not valued. I value its interesting form and that it is a late winter / early spring flower, indeed our first blossoms of 2023.
Type of Critique Requested
- Aesthetic: Feedback on the overall visual appeal of the image, including its color, lighting, cropping, and composition.
- Technical: Feedback on the technical aspects of the image, such as exposure, color, focus and reproduction of colors and details, post-processing, and print quality.
Specific Feedback and Self-Critique
To get this low the camera was placed on the driveway surface. The 90mm macro was manually focused, while viewing on the tilt screen, at just before MFD so this is nearly 1:1 reproduction, and then it was cropped.
Focusing was challenging. Using focus magnification and red peaking the focus point was the center of the largest flower atop the right hand stalk. To improve focus of the other blossoms I used Topaz Sharpen AI. I’d intended to shoot at f/16 but must have bumped my front control wheel to f/13. Focus stacking was tried but there was too much wind motion. Global and regional luninosity adjustments were in LrC. Color profile is Adobe Color which I did not alter. Light was late afternoon late winter sun from over my left shoulder. Background is the concrete ramp into our garage.
Technical Details
Sony a7Riv w/ Sony 2.8/90 macro, f/13 1/100" ISO=1250