Hi, my dear friends!
Thursday is a macro day. With this in mind, I devoted time to macro photography during our walk with dogs two days ago. We went to the forest. As always, I left the car on the edge of the field that separates the forest from the road and we went further on foot.
There seemed to be nothing attractive around. But macro photography is different from landscape photography in that it allows you to see those tiny details that usually remain out of our attention. For example, these dried field grasses of the umbrella family.
If you look closely, you can see that the tiny umbrellas are intertwined in a bizarre pattern. Some of them even have seeds.
Or this young pine. It is very young and what distinguishes it from old pines is not only the size and age, but also a brighter color. I always like young pines. They're like balls with disproportionately huge needles. Or disheveled naughty children who don't want to know about the existence of combs.
We finally went into the forest. Despite January, it looks spring. These rowan berries, which have not yet been eaten by squirrels, look like tiny apples. In fact, they're not bigger than my nail.
The most common bump can also become the object of forest macro photography. Her bizarre pattern is something we often don't notice.
And finally, the most interesting thing (I think). Of course, I absolutely do not like this natural parasite, which made a dwelling on the bark of a tree, but I definitely like the combination of shades and a fancy pattern.