The next experiment for me to try was to play with the positioning of my lighting. At this point I had resisted the urge to buy a flash-trigger system and I opted for the cheaper option of halogen work lights. This allowed me to alter the angle of light entering the mini-studio and as a result I learned something about shadows. In the first example of this I really liked the lighting on the rose head, but was a little disappointed by the shadowing in front of the bloom. Quite an easy fix in photoshop, but I decided to leave the image as it was so that I could use it for reference later.
In the case of the yellow roses, I was reasonably happy with the shot - but for the shadow on the right under the leaves. However, if I were taking this picture now I would have probably removed some of those leaves rather than adjusting the lighting. This would have placed more focus on the blooms.
I had seen some macro shots of leaves and stamen and decided that I would like to try it myself. I picked a red tulip and a white lily and played around with the lighting to achieve the look I wanted. Initially I thought I would want the light directed into the flower itself, but I found that this blew out the detail by providing too much brightness. So for the next two shots I lit the flowers from behind and got rid of the shadows by using a smaller light directed into the flower.
These two shots received some very positive feedback from the online forum and I really began to feel that I had started to move in the right direction with my photography.
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