Filling the Frame with Flowers and Leaves

Late summer bouquet of garden flowers
Late summer bouquet of garden flowers

We all have a style of photography, whether or not we recognise it ourselves. My interest in colours and patterns pre-dates my love of taking pictures and I like to look up close, probably because my long-distance vision leaves something to be desired.

Fern with contrasting colours of ornamental grasses
Fern with ornamental grasses

So Anne’s challenge – Filling the Frame – is a natural one for me, perhaps too much so. Over the years, a couple of people whose opinions I respect have suggested that my photography would improve if I stepped back a bit and showed more of the scene.

Green and white striped bromeliad with purple leaf tips
Striped bromeliad

Perhaps, but I’m not anticipating awards for photography. I take pictures to please myself, knowing I can share some of my favourites here with others who take photographs for the love of it and who will cut me some slack.

Coleus with piny-burgundy leaves edged in green
Coleus

In some pictures, I’m aiming towards a flat surface decoration effect, such as you might see on wallpapers or fabrics.

Dinnerplate dahlias with other flowers
Dinnerplate dahlias with other flowers

Often I’m trying to capture something charming that will otherwise slip away.

Everlasting flowers: dried flower heads of Helichrysum bracteatum
Dried flower heads of Helichrysum bracteatum

At flower shows, we are often being invited to admire details on new plants or old favourites.

Pelargonium 'Contrast' has fancy patterned green, red and purple leaved, edged with cream
Fancy-leaved Pelargonium ‘Contrast’

Variegated leaves…

Agapanthus
Agapanthus

subtle or startling colour combinations…

Aeonium 'Superbang' - variegated greed and red succulent
Aeonium ‘Superbang’

plants in tip-top condition with perfect leaves and flowers. It only seems right to get up close.

Posy of sweet peas on a red table
Posy of sweet peas

My eye can be drawn more to moods and harmonies in the colours than to the notional subject of the picture.

Leaf pile topped with daisies and sweet peas
Flower-strewn leaf pile
Fort Worth Botanic Garden: leaves and ornamental grasses backlit
Fort Worth Botanic Garden
Monarda 'Berry Taffy' buds and flowers
Monarda ‘Berry Taffy’

My portrait of Monarda ‘Berry Taffy’ is unlike any other I’ve seen online – and I checked. (I google images of flowers before I post them under their names as I would rather not add to the misinformation online where I can easily avoid it.)

Here, the younger, pale green leaf bracts with their delicate red stripe and the mounded buds add their patterns to the open flowers and the darker, more mature leaves.

Flower bed with trophy at the Southport Flower Show
Flower bed with trophy

My instinct to fill the frame does come at a cost, mainly paid by the viewer. I remember seeing an iron bedstead covered with bedding plants at this year’s Southport Flower Show, but if I hadn’t mentioned that,  it’s not easy to make out from the crop.

I’ll leave you with a handful of roses, as they are the subject I most often return to:

Close up of Rosa 'Lady of Shalott'
Rosa ‘Lady of Shalott’
Close up of Rosa 'Belinda's Dream'
Rosa ‘Belinda’s Dream’
Rose in a flower bouquet
Rose in a flower bouquet

Shared for this week’s Lens-Artists Challenge: Filling the Frame. Thanks for hosting, Anne!

67 Replies to “Filling the Frame with Flowers and Leaves”

  1. Lovely photos Susan, and I do enjoy seeing all that detail and colour close up. That Pelargonium for example is gorgeous! 😃

    1. I’m very happy to hear that and I’ll bear that in mind. I do try to vary the pictures I take, but some subjects draw me like a magnet.

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