forest

Moss and Lichen on the Forest Floor by Todd Henson

Moss and lichen on the forest floor

Photographing through a macro lens can affect how we see. We may begin to notice smaller details in the scene before us, and find that even when we get very close there’s still an incredibly rich expanse seemingly hidden within such a tiny sliver of space. Of course, capturing what we’re seeing and feeling is another matter entirely.

While hiking trails through the forest in early summer my eyes kept moving to the rich diversity of moss and lichen in various locations. So I picked out one with a mix of color and texture and set to finding a composition. I’ve always struggled with this sort of photograph. What is the subject? There’s so much going on, and yet it’s exactly that complexity that drew my attention. So I tried to include as much of the color and texture as I could. I don’t know what those rust-red things are but I love how they stand out amongst the various shades of green, because of both their color and shape.

Looking back on it now I see things I perhaps could have done better at the time. I’m a photographer who naturally leans towards creating images with shallow depth of field. But an image like this seems to benefit from great depth of field. I knew this so I intentionally stopped down the aperture to capture more of the scene in focus. In this case I used an aperture of f/25, which on a typical wide angle lens might have done the trick. But when you get very close to a subject with a macro lens it becomes increasingly difficult to get everything in focus even with the aperture stopped way down. Granted, with this lens I could have stopped down more, but I’m not sure if it would have been sufficient.

So, what could I have done to increase the depth of field to make everything in the photograph appear in focus? Possibly nothing directly in camera. But I could have used a technique called focus stacking where I create multiple images of the same scene in the field, adjusting the focus just a bit for each image until I’ve captured the entire depth of the scene. Then when I get home I import all the photos into Photoshop and stack them together. Photoshop works its magic, picking the sharpest parts of each image and combining them all into one final, hopefully fully focused image.

I’m still pleased with this image. It shows some of the diversity of tiny life in a forest, and how there’s often so much more there than we typically see. But I also like to analyze my efforts so I can learn and grow, both in techniques like focus stacking, and in the more artistic side of how best to compose such an image. I find the artistic side the most challenging, and one I’m still working on, so today I chose to talk about the more technical side.

If you have any thoughts or suggestions, whether technical or artistic, I’d be happy to hear them in the comments below.


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Variations on a Theme: Mushrooms by Todd Henson

Mushrooms can be so fascinating, both in their variety and in how you can create such similar but different photographs of them. Todays topic focuses on two different mushrooms I found not very far apart on the forest floor, each growing from a fallen tree. They look very similar but have very different backgrounds and grew on either different fallen trees or different sections of the same tree. This provides an interesting comparison between them, variations on a theme, as it were.

Variations on a Theme: Mushroom #1

Variations on a Theme: Mushroom #2

Click on the photos to get a larger view. If you look very closely one of them has a hidden surprise, a small line of spider silk stretching from the edge of the mushroom.


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A Meadowood Mushroom by Todd Henson

A top down view of this beautiful mushroom along the edge of the trail.

I love photographing mushrooms and other fungi along the various trails I hike. There always seems to be something new to see, whether it’s a type of mushroom I’ve not yet photographed or just an interesting view of one. In the case of today’s post I’m not sure what species of mushroom this is, but I was drawn to it for how perfect it looked, and so close to the trail where people or dogs might easily and unknowingly crush it underfoot.

The first thing I noticed about it was how nice a circle the top created and how great it looked in the area of the forest floor it was growing on. So I stood over top and photographed it set against that forest floor, opening up the aperture enough to slightly blur the forest floor but leave it enough in focus to tell what’s what.

I love both the color and the various textures in this mushroom.

Then I got down on my stomach and tried to view what I could see of its underside. I loved the textures there, both on the stalk of the mushroom and on its underside, those interesting thin layers or ribs. This photo is actually a stitched panorama of two images. Looking back I should have gone a little lower to show where the mushroom was growing out of the ground.

Finally, I was so fascinated by those ribs under the top I got in really close with the macro lens and showed the edge of the top of the mushroom. We can see how the ribs are spaced along the underside. I decided to use an extremely shallow depth of field for this one.

It’s fun creating slightly more abstract views with closeups from nature.

I hope you’ve enjoyed this brief look at one mushroom I found along a trail at Meadowood Special Recreation Management Area in Virginia, a great little location full of mixed use trails for hiking, horseback riding, and mountain biking.


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