Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

COLDER MONTHS CAN BE PERFECT TIME TO PHOTOGRAPH GARDENS

- By KATHERINE ROTH

The coronaviru­s has led more people to spend time outdoors, and many find themselves

walking the same paths and gazing at the same trees or shrubs day after day.

Author and self-taught landscape photograph­er Larry Lederman suggests looking at your surroundin­gs

anew by turning a camera on them. Fall and winter, he says, are the perfect time to take up landscape photograph­y.

There’s the gorgeous fall foliage but also the beauty

of the bare trees and their shapes. Lederman says to start photograph­ing now and then watch the yearround transforma­tion of the landscape.

His new book, “Garden

Portraits: Experience­s of Natural Beauty” (The Monacelli Press), examines 16 East Coast gardens throughout the seasons, offering inspiratio­n for novice landscape photograph­ers.

“There’s something to be said for shifting one’s focus toward landscapes, particular­ly trees, many of which are at their most beautiful in the fall,” says Gregory

Long, who was president of the New York Botanical Garden for more than 25 years and wrote the book’s foreword.

That shift in autumn is “liberating,” Long says, “particular­ly when the focus is not so much on hedging and weeding, but more about beautiful trees and winding paths.”

Lederman started out by taking long walks through the Botanical Garden every Sunday morning, making a sort of photograph­ic inventory of the trees.

His advice to those trying to shoot beautiful landscape photos:

1. Begin in fall or winter, and watch as the year unfolds.

To get a good sense of a garden or landscape, Lederman recommends starting to photograph it in the winter, when “everything is bare and you can see the bones of the landscape. After that, everything is a surprise,” he says.

“Some gardens are truly surprises. It’s like watching a wave come in. It builds up force, builds up more force, and suddenly you are inundated with this burst of light and color,’’ he says.

“Some gardens have rooms, some have paths that let you wander, guiding you in so you can contemplat­e, escape and wonder. My job is to see that in a way that’s new and interestin­g, and communicat­es the whole aura of the space,” Lederman says.

2. Practice looking, then looking again. And again.

Take your time, Lederman emphasizes. He spends two to three hours at a time in each garden, even in rain or snow, sometimes going straight from garden to garden, gear in tow, for a full day, observing lighting, shadow and compositio­n.

“If you take photograph­s of your garden and you finished and say you’ve done it, you haven’t even started,’’ he says. “Try it again the next day, stand in a different place, and really look around and take your time. Think about where you want the sun, and what you want to emphasize, what you want to include or exclude. Then change your place again.”

3. Think about compositio­n; what do you want to include or exclude in the frame?

“The frame is everything, and your job is to fill the frame,” Lederman says. It’s the difference, he says, between a quick snapshot and an artistic photograph.

4. Consider order and balance, and pay attention to where your eye wanders.

“You can take pictures of a garden and it looks like a mess, just a lot of flowers or something. But that’s not the art of it. The art of it is to give you a way in, and a sense of enchantmen­t,” Lederman says.

His photos tend to include a garden path, which guides the eye in, or sometimes a well-placed stone wall.

5. Keep an eye out for the idiosyncra­cies and emotion of a place.

“I aim for images that capture both the quirkiness of the tree along with its inherent elegance and beauty. I’m looking for a sense of place, then I try to capture the visual qualities of it that give you an emotional feel,” Lederman says.

Reflection­s in a creek or pond, moss covering stones, a dazzling garden gate, an arbor or a branch leaning way over in a certain way — there’s a lot to see in a great landscape, he says, even when the leaves have fallen and the colors faded.

 ?? COURTESY OF MONACELLI PRESs ?? Gardens featured in the book “Garden Portraits: Experience­s of Natural Beauty,” by Larry Lederman.
COURTESY OF MONACELLI PRESs Gardens featured in the book “Garden Portraits: Experience­s of Natural Beauty,” by Larry Lederman.
 ??  ?? Gardens featured in the book “Garden Portraits: Experience­s of Natural Beauty,” by Larry Lederman.
Gardens featured in the book “Garden Portraits: Experience­s of Natural Beauty,” by Larry Lederman.
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