Hey, remember last Saturday, when I was complaining about how cold and dry it'd been so far this winter? Well, on Saturday and Sunday, we were having an actual blizzard, officially, with the National Weather Service issuing Blizzard Warnings and making increasingly overwrought pronouncements about the inadvisability of trying to go anywhere: slick roads (there was rain for a few hours before the snow started), strong winds (20-30 mph / 32-48 kph sustained, with gusts to 50 mph / 80 kph), heavy snow coming down and then blowing around creating "near-whiteout conditions" and life-threatening wind chills (to -20F / -29C) and so forth.
But: not only did most of the actual snowfall happen at night when I wasn't awake to watch it, but we hardly got any snow at all, maybe two inches (5 cm) at most. (They had been predicting 3-4 in / 8-10 cm.) And, now it's that much colder, so I didn't get a warm-up or a snowfall, thanks a lot, Mr. Blizzard.
So I'm shunning winter until it decides to straighten up and be more reasonable. At least for today, it's summer on PATSP. We've got sunflowers, crotons, cannas, corn, all kinds of summery stuff.
(The previous transmitted light posts can be found here.)
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
[Exceptionally] Pretty pictures: transmitted light -- Part XXXVII
Labels:
Canna,
Codiaeum,
Ctenanthe,
Ficus,
Helianthus,
Ledebouria,
Phytolacca,
Platycerium,
pretty picture,
Synadenium,
transmitted light,
Zea
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6 comments:
How did you get the photo of Ctenanthe if you didn't buy the plant?
Easily one of your best sets Mr_S!
Intricate and warm.
Can I join you in shunning winter? We've been having record-breaking heat here in Arizona. In December. It's been in the eighties the last couple of days.
I want cold weather! Or at least what passes for cold here in the desert.
Ginny Burton:
It doesn't take long to hold the leaf and snap a few pictures, even in the store.
You might have said this before, but how do you take these pictures?
They are interesting.
Anonymous:
A lot of the time, I just put the camera under the leaf and take the picture. It doesn't always work out, but sometimes it really is that simple.
I've also been known to hold leaves on top of lights, or tape leaves to lights. Taping leaves to a south-facing window (to hold them still and flat) works out probably the best of anything I've tried, but it takes the most time.
After the photos are taken, I upload them to the computer, pick whichever one seems clearest, rotate it so the leaf is pointed directly left-to-right, tweak the color if needed,[1] and upload to the blog.
Really the only tricks are 1) being able to hold the camera and/or leaf steady enough that the shot isn't blurred, and 2) keeping the area behind the camera as dark as possible so it doesn't bounce light back at the underside of the leaf.
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[1] Sometimes the camera makes weird color decisions without me, or I'll have a light source that gives me bad color fidelity, and the pictures will come out unnaturally blue, or yellow, or washed-out, or whatever. So I try to correct it.
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