Valentine: Flowers and Photography

Residents at Smith Ranch look for­ward to a new five-​foot bou­quet at the center of their buffet every­week. And here it is for Valentine’s Day.

Valentine Bouquet Five-footer

Valentine Bouquet Five-​footer

South Anerican roses, local quince, lilies and “wax flowers” pro­vide the color and the tex­ture of this floral design. You can also see a selec­tion of other five-​footers on my web­site.

How We Photograph Big Flower Arrangements in Bad Light

  • First, we use an antique dig­ital camera, Nikon CoolPix 5000, updated with the manufacturer’s soft­ware patch to enable shooting in RAW. Our CoolPix 5000 is one of the oldest, lightest RAW shooters around. Luckily so, because RAW pro­cessing is impor­tant for this.
  • Next, in an ideal world we would secure the camera to our expen­sive tripod for shooting. Got tripod but the buffet is too busy to set it up. Likewise, to set-​up a few studio lights, no way. So, here’s what we do:
  • Set the camera’s file size to RAW and its dig­ital ISO to 800 (yep, eight hun­dred — makes the pic­ture noisy, speckles, but there’s a reli­able way to fix that).
  • Set the camera’s other con­trols to “auto,” but NO flash.
  • Then, select the person with the stead­iest hands (Yukiko) to sit with her elbows on the table oppo­site the bou­quet and very slowly, lightly squeeze off three or four shots. In our expe­ri­ence at least one of the four will be suf­fi­ciently steady and clear to let us work-​up a decent image,
  • For photo-​editing we use PhotoshopCS (nearly as old as our flower camera) RAW pro­cessing, pri­marily to adjust the light on the bouquet.
  • One of the early steps is to use the Noise Ninja plugin (user installed in PhotoshopCS) to reduce or elim­i­nate the noise so that no speckles are apparent to the human eye. I learned this tech­nique in land­scape and wildlife pho­tog­raphy where out­door light is often poor, espe­cially in early morning.
  • And then we do the con­ven­tional photo edits, selec­tive adjust­ments (espe­cially where the light is still falling poorly), crop­ping, sizing, sharp­ening, etc.

It may seem like an awful lot of trouble at first, but once you get the hang of it, it goes pretty quickly.

Check-​out this year’s five-​foot Valentine Bouquet, above, and share your com­ments below.

<a href=“http://technorati.com/claim/ck2n93np2b” rel=“me”>Technorati Profile</a>

FacebookShare
This entry was posted in design, photography, Valentine and tagged , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply