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Botany Photo of the Day
In science, beauty. In beauty, science. Daily.

David C. Lam Asian Garden

David C. Lam Asian Garden

This scene from the David C. Lam Asian Garden was originally taken as an unremarkable colour photograph. It was then transformed into black-and-white using Photoshop's Calculations command via a 100% overlay of the green and blue channels. I've said it before, but it bears repeating - if you like playing around with black-and-white, the Calculations command is a far better path of action than simply transforming a photograph directly into greyscale.

The main plant in this scenic shot, Petasites japonicus var. giganteus, will be featured in an upcoming Botany Photo of the Day entry; I'll write more about it in accompaniment to that photograph.

Photography resource link: Polarizers via The Luminous Landscape. Concluding quote from the article: “A polarizing filter is the most productive accessory that a [nature] photographer can have in his kit, second only to a decent tripod and head.

4 Comments

speedo commented:

very cool photo, and I must say ever since I downloaded your widget for the OS X dashboard I love checking it out daily.

I realize there's probably a FAQ somewhere but how do you decide what order to post in, do you take requests?

Daniel Mosquin commented:

Thanks!

There's really no FAQ, though there is an About Botany Photo of the Day page. Also, there are a few ways to submit photos (links at the bottom of the page).

What order to post in? That's a good question. There is a certain amount of logic to what and what order entries are posted. Here are some general rules, which I break often:

1) I try to post one submitted photograph a week

2) I try to ensure that the seven most recent photographs (the ones on the main BPotD page) are at least somewhat compositionally and “colourfully” different.

3) I try to show photographs in season, though I'm not always successful at this. It's a bit of a moot point, though, since the audience is international; what is in bloom locally may have finished weeks ago a few hundred kilometres to the south.

4) Lastly, if there is a particular event (especially UBC Botanical Garden events) that I can help promote a bit, I will. For example, expect an apple photograph or two in the upcoming weeks re: AppleFest.

Excepting those rules, though, I follow my muse. I try to take photographs in the garden every week, though lately I've only managed every second week. A few hours is often sufficient to supply photographs for 5-7 entries, sometimes more. It's an interesting sort of pressure to decide what's good enough to share with a few thousand people every day.

As for requests, sure, but they are of course limited to what I have access to.

Daniel Mosquin commented:

Just a few more rules:

5) I try to feature plants from different plant families. In the mid-term, I'd like to index the images based on plant families, though that will probably be done with other software. Long-term, a photograph from each family would be a goal.

6) As another long-term project, I'd like to develop a Google Map application that georeferences the location of the photograph, so that one can browse the Google Map and search by entries geographically. Once that's done, I'd then have a new goal...

Daniel Mosquin commented:

I feel like I'm talking to myself with three comments in a row! Anyway, I received an email asking me about “overlay” in Photoshop.

Overlay is one type of blending allowed via the Calculations command. To access it: from the top-level menu, click on Image -> Calculations... and you will then be presented with the Calculations options. From here, I play (and I do mean play because I find it fun) with: Channels, Blending and Opacity. So, for the image above, I set Source 1 Channel to Blue, Source 2 Channel to Green, selected Overlay from the Blending dropdown and left Opacity at 100%.

The final step, if you are satisfied with your creation (and want to make it easy on yourself), is to ensure you change Result to "New Document" instead of "New Channel".

For a better explanation of the technique, I'll refer you to Darwin Wiggett's Great Black-n-White Photos From Colour Film.

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Please share your comments about the photograph(s) and accompanying write-up. Telling a story about the subject of the photograph(s) is also much appreciated! If you have a gardening question, the best place to ask is on the UBC Botanical Garden Forums. Thank you!

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