Poppy Silhouette

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Another post from behind the anti-deer mesh, with no mesh showing. This time I feature silhouettes of bees collecting pollen from a poppy. I found it quite striking that sometimes I could detect the colour of the bee’s wings projected onto and through the backlit petal. There was constant movement, and it reminded me of a natural Javanese shadow puppet show.

You can get a sense of that dance performance in the animated GIF below. Sorry if it is a bit slow to load, it is hard to keep size down with animations. There is a chance it might not display on  screens narrower than 1024 pixels (I find I have to post them exactly the size they were created or they don’t work). Let me know if, after a reasonable amount of time for downloading a 2.4 megabyte file, there is no animation visible for you, and what device you are viewing on, I want to make these things work properly.

You can see other posts in the deer fencing series here. I will show some bee pictures taken from the other side of this flower in a future post (here). More of this silhouetted poppy, without bees and much closer in, can be found here.

PoppyBeesSilhouette

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Canon EOS 5D MkII, Canon EF 100mm/f2.8 macro lens, ISO100, f2.8. Animation compiled from 10 images taken within one minute. The stills are from a different series taken a few minutes apart. All images hand-held taken with the purpose of capturing the best silhouette, not with animation in mind. Therefore they required cropping to get a similar distance and location. Not perfect, but better than I expected when the idea first occurred to me.

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15 thoughts on “Poppy Silhouette

  1. I ended up in this entry from your latest posting. Poppies are photogenic right from the start, but this is an approach that makes the photographs interesting beyond their prettiness. I like all the photographs, especially the animation. By the way the GIF image works like a hot damn on both computer and my telephone.

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    • Thank you Joseph. Poppies are photogenic, even when gone to seed. I am glad you also found them interesting. And thank you for the technological testing, it is good to know it works on a phone too. They are quite a lot of work, and it would be shame to put them out there if they were not working on all platforms.

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  2. Pingback: Gathering of Pollen | burnt embers

    • Thank you David, for the compliment and the information about your computer. I am now wondering about mobile devices, will have to ask one of my sons to check I suppose.

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    • Thanks Melinda – these poppies are in a raised bed (mid/upper-thigh level) and are then quite tall plants, so they were up quite high were I could more easily notice that this was going on.

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      • If they had been lower I would not have seen the possibilities. Which means maybe I should be adding one of those bomb searching mirrors-on-a-stick to my photo-kit, so I don’t miss these interesting events.

        Drawback: If seen using it, I might get a rep as paranoid, or worse. “Bombs under flowers? The man’s a nutter!”

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      • That is a trick question. There is the *slightest* possibility for just about anything to be true. So, I won’t answer it. :p

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    • Hi Lynn – thanks for the feedback and I am glad you like these photos. There are so many ways to look at a flower, but this is one that is not usually offered to us unless the blossoms are at eye level or higher.
      These poppies really look very different from the opposite direction – much of that delicacy is gone, and all of the translucence. I will post some examples in a few days.

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