Tag: Thursday Trios

A trio of violets

A trio of violets blooming in early spring.
A line-up of early spring violets.
A trio of violets: Pretty maids all in a row.

While walking the pups this morning this trio of violets caught my eye. They reminded me of the nursery rhyme: Silver bells and cockle shells and pretty maids all in a row. In another part of this bed was a group of snow drops that could be the silver bells. Maybe the leaves could be called cockle shells…or maybe I’m trying to hard to make it fit. Regardless, the violets looked fresh and charming in the morning light filtering through the clouds.

A trio of snow drops.
Silver bells?

This neighbor has a wonder-filled yard. In my mind I call her the “sane rose lady”, because her special love is roses. She has what I believe is called a “cottage garden” it appears to be pure chaos, but it’s controlled chaos. In a few conversations with her I have come to realize that she knows the name of every plant and nurtures them assiduously. Her plot is full of beauty and charm, year around. Walking by always brings me a smile.

For Mama Cormier’s Thursday Trios and Cee’s Flower of the Day.

As usual, I took the photos with my Sony RX10iv camera and used Raw Therapee and the GIMP to process the photos. My workflow is described in this post.

Dramatic midsummer blues

Johnson's blue cranesbill geraniums chiaroscuro style.

Johnson’s blue cranesbill geraniums are going strong as midsummer approaches. On the rainier side of the mountains in the Pacific Northwest our summers tend to start a little later than most. We can’t reliably plan an outdoor event in advance until after Independence Day.While June is a great time for roses some of the other flowers are going strong right now as well and the crane’s bill geraniums are a personal favorite. This trio peaking out of the shade caught my eye while walking the dogs a couple of days ago.

Chiaroscuro
Crane’s bill geraniums.

For Cee’s Flower of the Day and Mama Cormier’s Thursday Trios.

Chiaroscuro style image

I’ve been experimenting with the technique this month, using flowers and the somewhat harsh natural light of June. First taking a photo where the highlights show against shadows. Then using post processing to increase the dramatic difference: Chiaroscuro means light/shadow.

Chiaroscuro is a method from painting, popular during the Renaissance. Here is an example:

Rembrandt van Rijn: Man in Oriental Costume (1632)

Chiaroscuro features are deep shadows and strong highlights from a directional light source,with lots of detail in the highlights.

To get the effect I underexpose the photo a bit, enough to ensure that no details are lost in the highlights.

The next step is to use Raw Therapee. The tools I’ve found helpful, in no particular order, are:

In the Exposure tab: highlight compression in the Exposure tools. This brings out detail in the bright areas. Also, I use the tone curves.

In the Details tab: the Haze Removal tool brings out details and darkens the shadows. Also, for some photos, the Contrast by details tool is useful. Note: I always apply both the Local contrast and Noise Reduction for color noise. My post Create a Raw Therapee Processing Profile describes the tools I apply to all photos.

I finish up in the GIMP, where I make a duplicate layer and the multiply blend mode, modifying the opacity and masking the layer to get a more dramatic contrast between the light and dark layers. Then I make a layer from the visible (some people might use a merge function in lieu of this) use the curves tool to finish up. Colors>Curves.

If you are unfamiliar with using the open-source software Raw Therapee and the GIMP, you can learn about using them in this post: Photo processing workflow using open source software.