Macro Practice

in #hive-1949132 years ago

It's not spring anymore, so the bud season is almost over, but if you know where to look, you can still find nice little buds. I have a whole garden to look for buds, so I thought it's time to practice macro and close-up photography.

20230606_110432a.jpg

A few years ago I used to post gardening quizzes. Took some photos of the vegetable flowers and posted those on Hive. Then people took a shot at them. Those who have never seen the plants growing had no idea, what flowers those were. it was a fun game. However, today I'm not going to put you through this torture. I'm going to tell you directly, that this is the tomato flower.

20230606_110451a.jpg

It's a tiny, hairy flower, that can't be called beautiful, but it has it's purpose.

20230606_110457a.jpg

These are the buds. It's always a joy to see them as the next phase is the tomato, the fruit itself.

20230608_094437a.jpg

Yesterday I noticed this pioneer, the first tomato this year. It's so tiny, but growing fast.

20230606_130249a.jpg

20230608_094601a.jpg

20230608_094637a.jpg

Cucumber leaves are a beauty, when they are this tiny. This is a macro photo, so the leaves are not big. That light green is lovely and the texture of the leaves are lovely as well. However, they can be a real enemy, once they grow old. The leaves are stingy, the young cucumbers are stingy as well.

20230608_094655a.jpg

And here it is, the first cucumber flower and the first cucumber. This is so tiny, I think it's barely 1cm long, but it's still a cucumber and cute as a cucumber.

20230607_101234a.jpg

There's no day without admiring the raspberry leaves. I'm doing this every single year, till these light green, wrinkled leaves grow big and become dark green. At that phase I'm not interested anymore as this is what I like.

20230607_101253a.jpg

These are unedited photos by the way.

20230607_101310a.jpg

20230607_101336a.jpg

20230607_101344a.jpg

20230607_101830a.jpg

This is a huge mystery and an anomaly as well. These are also raspberry leaves but nothing like the one I posted above. I don't know what's causing them to be different, but it's not good.

20230607_101727a.jpg

Grape leaves are still growing. I mean you can still find a bunch of buds, small leaves, perfect to photograph.

20230607_101841a.jpg

These leaves are from the same branch. I loved how they looked.

20230607_101910a.jpg

Raspberries. After taking theses photos and downloading them to my laptop, saw that the fruits are starting to turn red, which is a good sign. In a month I'll be busy harvesting and making jam, or juice. I need to decide till then.

20230607_102127a.jpg

And here's the beast. I've never gotten so close to one till now. I prefer to keep my distance as they are dangerous, I know first hand how painful a close encounter with them can be. However, I said, now or never and tried my hand at taking close-ups.

20230607_103415a.jpg

This was the other one. This photo is not sharp enough, but I wanted to show you what it is as I've never seen anything like this. At first glance I thought it was a ladybug but it's not. It's an ugly creature and I'm sure it's up to no good. Ok, I Googled ladybug and turns out this is pupa.

A pupa is the life stage of some insects undergoing transformation between immature and mature stages. Insects that go through a pupal stage are holometabolous: they go through four distinct stages in their life cycle, the stages thereof being egg, larva, pupa, and imago. The processes of entering and completing the pupal stage are controlled by the insect's hormones, especially juvenile hormone, prothoracicotropic hormone, and ecdysone. The act of becoming a pupa is called pupation, and the act of emerging from the pupal case is called eclosion or emergence. source

If you're a newbie, you may want to check out these guides:


presearch

Sort:  

I saw the title of your post yesterday, but ended up so tired I forgot to go in and look at the photos. I love macro photos.
It is also complicated to do as you have to have good equipment for it. You have done very well in practice. Loved the photo of the beast hahaha...and how can a cucumber be stingy?


This post was shared and voted inside the discord by the curators team of discovery-it
Join our Community and follow our Curation Trail
Discovery-it is also a Witness, vote for us here
Delegate to us for passive income. Check our 80% fee-back Program

I never knew that this is how romato flower always look like
You have taken nice shots!

Excellent 👏👏👏 really amazing photos, what kind of lens do you used?

Thank you @lindoro. Nothing fancy, this is done with my smartphone, a Samsung Galaxy F62 😃

😱😱, I want to bought a Samsung Galaxy like that, nice shots, congratulations, best regards

perfect shot, I really like the tomato flower.

I'm glad to hear that, thank you.

Excellent photographic macro exercise @erikah friend!

!discovery 28
!VSC

Thanks a lot my friend :)

@jlinaresp has sent VSC to @erikah

This post was rewarded with 0.1 VSC to support your work.
Join our photography communityVisual Shots
Check here to view or trade VSC Tokens
Be part of our Curation Trail


@jlinaresp ha enviado VSC a @erikah

Éste post fue recompensado con 0.1 VSC para apoyar tu trabajo.
Únete a nuestra comunidad de fotografía Visual Shots
Consulte aquí para ver o intercambiar VSC Tokens
Se parte de nuestro Trail de Curación


Uses: 3/25

What a beautiful garden , you take lovely pictures, those green leaves really pop up!!

Many thanks @pumarte, I do what I can, with what I have 😀

That's all you need! 😄

That reminds me, if this wildfire smoke will ever dissipate I need to get some maters in the ground.

When we were growing up our dad would give us tree identification quizzes, were your gardening quizzes less painful than that?

Lol, interesting. Well, those quizzes were for fun and hardly ever got the right answer. I hope those wildfires can be stopped as the damage they have caused is already huge.

Beautiful blurs means excellent focus and shots! This is what you call a practice? Anyways, I am amazed!

Lol, yes, this is what I call practice 😂 and thank you for the compliment. Have a nice weekend :)

How long does it take tomatoes to produce fruit?

It depends on the climate, type of tomatoes and soil, but in general, where the garden is, it takes 4 months or so.

Keep on practicing with the close-up shots! You are already doing a great job :D

Thank you Gabriela, but you know how it is, Hit some, miss some, depends on the circumstances. Have a nice weekend.

Absolutely. But without mistakes you wouldn't be able to improve your skill. Have a great weekend too! ❤️

So pretty images! I also want to take garden photos while its green :)
Apologies if you mentioned it and I missed it, but what phone/camera did you use?
!HUG

Dear @erikah, you just got hugged.
I sent 1.0 HUG on behalf of @katerinaramm.
(1/2)

Thank you Katerina 😊 I hope you can take those photos soon.

I mentioned in a comment, it's my phone, a Samsung Galaxy F62.

Macro photography really gives a different perspective on things and shows us another way to appreciate what we often overlook. Beautiful pictures!

I fully agree with that. I love macro, close-ups too.

Thanks for the nice comment my friend and happy weekend :)

Happy weekend to you too!

Thank you 😊

Beautiful photographs

I have just come from the garden to look after the tomato plants which are in full bloom and some of them already have tomato plants like in your photo.

What a delight to be able to eat natural tomatoes in a few weeks.

Thank you! It's definitely good to have a garden and be able to eat what you grow, especially now that everything is so expensive and not always healthy.

I have potatoes, tomatoes, peppers, lettuce, courgettes and beans.

The great natural pantry

They turned out very beautiful on you, my congratulations, they are some beautiful macro shots, that combination of green and light gives it a bit of magic ❤❤❤