I have Photoshop, but haven’t learned to use it. I find that there are so many good apps around, and if the images are going to be posted online, the apps work fine (and are easy to use).
When I was pregnant with my oldest I found myself confined to bedrest in the hospital. My husband brought me flowers a few times – tulips and daffodils. I loved watching them change. I even loved them when they were dead and in the vase. The nurses thought it was depressing but I thought they were beautiful. There is beauty in the full bloom and in the decayed blossom. Your photo is lovely.
I totally agree; we are so conditioned to think that beauty is “perfection” and ignore so much that is wonderful around us.
I hate being confined to bed and would have been the worst patient ever! I was ready to go home about an hour after my son’s birth and had to be persuaded to stay overnight at the hospital. Ironically, I was the oldest woman on the ward (the slightly older one having been more forceful with the nurses and actually gone home already).
It was pretty miserable. But we made it 6 more weeks and he was born at 29 weeks weighing in at 2 lbs. 8 1/2 oz. Now he is my 18 year old, soon to be 19 year old missionary son. I was on bedrest with my second son also but made it to my schedule c-section. My third son was born 11 years later and they had a new treatment so I wasn’t on bedrest, just lots of restrictions. That was so much easier. He was still born about 5 weeks early and spent some time in the NICU. Being stuck in bed is really hard.
Beauty in both life and death.
janet
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Thanks Janet. I’m so glad you see that too.
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I have so many photos of dead plants in winter (or fall) and they definitely have a certain beauty.
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How did you arrange this shot… the surrounding texture around and over the hibiscus?
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I shot it on black felt, slightly under-exposed, and did some editing in Snapseed. The scratched texture is a filter in Snapseed. 🙂
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Oh, thought you used Photoshop. Beautiful shot!
Can’t do this with my 10 year old cell phone. I’m old school all the way, which is sometimes a pain in the butt!
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I have Photoshop, but haven’t learned to use it. I find that there are so many good apps around, and if the images are going to be posted online, the apps work fine (and are easy to use).
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They are a breath of flower heaven.
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Thank you Sally. I appreciate that you can see that their beauty only changes not dies.
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Intriguing title. Beautiful photo.
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Hibiscus flowers are one of my very favourites. Your picture is amazing, I like how the flowers roll themselves up when they wither.
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Thank you so much Sarah. I wish I could send you a nice big bright live bloom to add some extra spring colour to your world. 🙂
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Thank you, Su! I would so much love to have such a lovely live bloom to look at right now! 🙂 xxxxxx ❤
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Even in death they are lovely, Su.
Leslie
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Thank you Leslie. I’m fascinated with the changing shape and the way they curl in on themselves.
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Wow that’s exquisite. I agree, they are so interesting to photograph. The colours deepen and the texture changes.
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Thanks so much. My office is becoming a bit of a flower cemetery as I watch various blooms die and disintegrate.
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Ah! You’ve reminded me I have three disintegrating flowers waiting for me to shoot!
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When I was pregnant with my oldest I found myself confined to bedrest in the hospital. My husband brought me flowers a few times – tulips and daffodils. I loved watching them change. I even loved them when they were dead and in the vase. The nurses thought it was depressing but I thought they were beautiful. There is beauty in the full bloom and in the decayed blossom. Your photo is lovely.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I totally agree; we are so conditioned to think that beauty is “perfection” and ignore so much that is wonderful around us.
I hate being confined to bed and would have been the worst patient ever! I was ready to go home about an hour after my son’s birth and had to be persuaded to stay overnight at the hospital. Ironically, I was the oldest woman on the ward (the slightly older one having been more forceful with the nurses and actually gone home already).
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It was pretty miserable. But we made it 6 more weeks and he was born at 29 weeks weighing in at 2 lbs. 8 1/2 oz. Now he is my 18 year old, soon to be 19 year old missionary son. I was on bedrest with my second son also but made it to my schedule c-section. My third son was born 11 years later and they had a new treatment so I wasn’t on bedrest, just lots of restrictions. That was so much easier. He was still born about 5 weeks early and spent some time in the NICU. Being stuck in bed is really hard.
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Oh gosh; that is so tiny. I think you were getting lots of angel kisses during your pregnancies — invisible ones.
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Thank you Su! Yes, he was tiny. Such a miracle, lots of them.
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