Manawatu Standard

Get snap happy in the garden

As Julia Atkinson-dunn’s skills at growing have increased so too has her desire to get creative with her camera.

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Areally satisfying part of my gardening adventure has been documentin­g the progress as I go. Looking back at photos from my first-year planting, I can immediatel­y remember my thrill of those humble petunias and cosmos blooming, and also feeling pretty amazed at the garden compared to now. My backlog of images is a lovely reminder of just how far this obsession has taken me.

My love of photograph­y is very much buoyed by having a garden and, as my skills at growing have increased, so has my passion for getting creative with the camera.

Free of any expectatio­ns that a profession­al photograph­er might be compelled to meet, the quiet time spent snapping my flowers and beds has become a creative hobby in which I revel in experiment­ation.

This regular documentat­ion has also aided my gardening knowledge and connection to the life cycles happening in my own backyard. Not only has every year seen a vast transforma­tion in my garden as awhole, but each passing season has also offered visual treats to be collected and remembered.

When planning, I can easily refer to my library of images to gain a better understand­ing of how much light an area receives, vital for my planting combinatio­ns.

I can also compare the growth of trees and the noticeable improvemen­t in plants that I have moved to better positions.

Whether you prefer to reach for your camera, phone or tablet, there are some basic tips that I use to help me photograph my garden’s magic in a reflection of how it feels at the time.

My urge has always been to capture atmosphere and a sense of place beyond a simple, straight-up snapshot – there is so much fun to be had with this.

Photograph at the end of the day

The softness and lower angle of the sun in the morning and late afternoon provides a glow to the garden that invites me to use this light to my advantage. I like to point my lens towards it, using it to backlight specific plants or beds.

I enjoy moving my camera around to allow shafts or dots of light into the frame without completely washing out the photo. I love nothing more than a plant specimen traced in golden lines from the sun pushing through behind it.

Find your focus

Before you snap your image, first be sure that your device is focused on the area you want to highlight. On a camera, using autofocus, this will often be found by training and adjusting a green square to lock onto your subject with a half-press of the button.

On a phone or tablet, you can tap the subject on your screen to pull it into focus. If taking awider shot of a garden bed, tap or select a spot in its midst and take a few shots of it to be sure you’ll have one that works.

Change your point of view

Extend yourself from just photograph­ing at standing height and explore your garden from all angles. I find myself balancing on the edges of my raised beds to shoot from above, dropping a knee to look ‘‘through and up’’ plants, and often wading into beds to find a different aspect from within their midst.

I even prefer it when out-of-focus greenery cuts through a shot, feeling that it pulls me further into the final image.

Get up close and personal with your plants, find your focus and be amazed at the delicious results when your device automatica­lly reduces the depth of field. I encourage those with phones to explore the portrait mode option for this, too.

Use your legs to zoom

If you are using a phone or tablet, I would suggest you resist using your fingers to zoom and instead take progressiv­e photos as you physically move closer to your subject. Even though technology has improved in leaps and bounds, a ‘‘zoomed in’’ image is never as crisp. This is best done only using a camera.

Look for your lines

One of the easiest ways to improve your photo taking is by allowing time to ensure any hard line is level. This might be a fence, the horizon, or raised planter running through the background of your frame. I consider this too with vertical lines like doorways or veranda posts, anglingmy camera and body forward/back, up or down until it runs nicely parallel to the screen.

If I find that I haven’t got it right when reviewing my images later, I use my phone’s inbuilt editing software (or an editing app) to adjust the tilt and resave it.

Consider your compositio­n

If we never stopped to think about our shot, it would only be natural to place a subject in the middle of the frame. However, playing around with moving it off-centre can often make for amore visually appealing result.

When composing your shot, mentally break it into thirds, horizontal­ly and vertically. Aim to place your subject along the lines or at the intersecti­on of each third instead of smack in the centre. It is very helpful to turn on the ‘‘grid’’ option of your phone and camera to assist in getting used to composing using these zones. It will become innate!

Julia Atkinson-dunn is the writer and creative behind Studio Home. Follow her on @studiohome­gardening or studiohome.co.nz

 ?? JULIA ATKINSON-DUNN ?? If taking a wider shot of a garden bed, tap or select a spot in its midst and take a few shots of it to be sure you’ll have one that works.
JULIA ATKINSON-DUNN If taking a wider shot of a garden bed, tap or select a spot in its midst and take a few shots of it to be sure you’ll have one that works.
 ?? ?? Dawn is a terrific time to capture gardens like Flaxmere in all their glory.
Dawn is a terrific time to capture gardens like Flaxmere in all their glory.
 ?? ?? Try to keep vertical and horizontal lines as level as possible.
Try to keep vertical and horizontal lines as level as possible.

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