A Longwood Christmas

I was actually happy when the tripod registrar at Longwood Gardens told me that I could only use my tripod until noon the day I visited.  That forced me to think about what I could photograph handheld and my first thought was to pull out the Lensbaby.  I quickly formulated a plan in my mind that would take me to all of the areas that absolutely required the use of a tripod….macro images, shots bracketed for HDR, etc.  Once noon rolled around, and the Conservatory began to get more crowded, I was more than happy to put my tripod down and concentrate on creating more abstract images.  I took many orchid images using the Lensbaby Composer that day. The blog photo, however, was a shot taken early in my visit using the 100mm macro lens at f/4.5, 1/200th of a second, ISO 200.  My goal was to keep the ornament in focus while allowing the background pointsettia to be out of focus, but still recognizable.  I experimented with f/2.8, but at that focal length, parts of the ornament were out of focus.  f/4.5 seemed to be just right.  Having a cream poinsettia in the background was the perfect compliment to the soft pink ornament.  A red poinsettia would have been much too strong.  I’m pleased with the end result.

3 thoughts on “A Longwood Christmas

  • Amy Driscoll

    Stunning! I was there with my husband and daughter so I couldn’t do much more than point and shoot, then run to try to catch up to them, not that I could get such an amazing picture anyway!

  • Betsy (Post author)

    Thank you Amy & Cindy! Longwood is so crowded this time of year and that makes it more difficult to photograph. There is always someone walking into your shot! One poor employee kept apologizing to me because everytime I was focused and ready to go, he’d wander in front of the camera. It was funny!

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