Love this explanation! The question is on a different cultivar, such as C. Malworth ‘Orchidglade’ that is all soft colors what would the light differences do?I just remember hearing about morning light versus afternoon light when I was active in bird photography.
Morning light was brightly yellow gold shortly after sunrise.
Afternoon light was richer, warmer and has more or an orange component too it. You can logically figure out how that effects orchid images. Brighter morning shots, deeper, warmer, richer light in the late afternoon. Morning shots brighter and whiter images, afternoon a bit duller and with more of a golden orange or deep reddish orange component.
Very hard to describe but much easier to evaluate projected on a screen!
Djtomp, concentrate on the way that the white “pops” from inside the lip. That white would not really pop so white ‘white’ in an afternoon image.
Spectacular plant! Well done.My Cattleya intermedia is blooming again and doing so well that I am positing some updated pictures. I assumed that the natural light would help be capture the best image. However, I can not seem to get the colors just right.
Here it is in morning light:
View attachment 42097
Here it is at dusk:
View attachment 42098
View attachment 42099
Stephen, this way it looks far better.Less blue
Enter your email address to join: