The name of this camellia is “pink perfection”, but I think it looks good in black and white, especially with the dusting of snow on the leaves. This pale beauty starts to bloom around the beginning of the year and lasts through March. Winter came late this year and the only significant snowfall occurred after the flowers were starting to bloom. I caught this as the snow was starting. Soon afterwards it got thick and we trotted for home.
I took this with my Sony RX10iv camera. Basic settings: F4, 1/80s, focal length 52.8mm (35mm equivalent: 144mm). I converted it into black-and-white using Raw Therapee then cropped and added a vignette in the GIMP. Click here for information about using Raw Therapee’s Black-and-White tool.
Posted for Brashley Photography’s Mid-week Monochrome.
For a flower that bruises and discolors there is an advantage to black and white: it hides some of these imperfections. This pale pink flower shows bruising very easily. For this particular camellia, in black and white you can focus on the shapes and textures without the distraction of the imperfections.
Camellias are so beautiful, I love the monochrome tones. Many thanks for entering the challenge. xx