Dahlia by aksirp
Open full image in new tab Members remain the original copyright holder in all their materials here at Renderosity. Use of any of their material inconsistent with the terms and conditions set forth is prohibited and is considered an infringement of the copyrights of the respective holders unless specially stated otherwise.
Description
The Dahlia is fresh from this morning, seen in a farmer house garden near by.
I did some post work with the background because of artistic licence 😊
Comments (17)
farmerC
Exellent.
blankfrancine
Fine floral capture with wonderful light.
Mondwin
Excellent shot my friend!!!Bravissimo!V:DDD.Hugsxx Whylma
Jean_C
Une image pleine de délicatesse, superbe, Priska!
Faemike55
beautiful presentation - wonderful work
durleybeachbum
Perfection!
Cyve
Quel merveilleux gros-plan Prisca... Jolie fleur également !!!
rachris480907
Wonderful photo and excellent postwork!
PandaB5
That's really pretty.
Richardphotos
wonderful capture
kgb224
Perfect capture and outstanding photo editing Priska. God bless.
emmecielle
Wonderful image. Great capture! :)
moochagoo
Perfect lighting of this dahlia
sossy
Dalien waren in meiner kindheit meine lieblingsblumen! schöner ausschnitt der die blütenblätter zeigt, die wir kleine tüten aussehen 😃
jayfar
Brilliant work Priska.
auntietk
Such beautiful light!
anahata.c
Artistic license (what you mention in your description) is exactly what terrific photographers use and take. This is splendid. And sumptuous. The light is so soft, and the rolled-up petals are so creamy. And the yellows seem deep and cavernous, inside all that creamy white. And your encroaching black bathes your flower in deep chasms. And you placed the flower not in the center---as many would do---but left-center, drawing us to it all the more, and giving the right side a fuller 'voice' (because symmetry tends to equalize everything and take away character from all sides). Beautifully done. And, once more, essential to see it full size.
(This isn't an exact comparison, but it's in the same arena. Here's a google link to the photographer Edward Weston---I give you a full google link because it would take up too much space to give you individual links. You may know his work, but that doesn't lessen the comparison: When you see his contrasts of light and dark, and the way he captures undulation and curves, etc, you'll see a comparison to shots of yours. He came to mind immediately. Here's the link ((it's long!)): https://www.google.com/search?hl=en&tbm=isch&source=hp&biw=1472&bih=1229&ei=Rzb-WdWCJqvKjwS9upa4BA&q=edward+weston&oq=edward+weston&gs_l=img.3...812.3229.0.3463.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0..0.0....0...1..64.img..0.0.0....0.qBXNaOiLNGk)