Showing posts with label spring black and white. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spring black and white. Show all posts

Friday, May 11, 2012

mosaic muse {spring in black & white}

mosaic muse {spring in black & white}
1. veined, 2. A Lesson in Patience, 3. Untitled, 4. *, 5. Driven by a beating heart, 6. Untitled, 7. Untitled, 8. Duplicate, 9. running circles, 10. Untitled, 11. the kids are alright, 12. Sleepyhead. #niece, 13. Caress, 14. Peek-a-boo, 15. brown-eyed susans, 16. black & white hellebores

Well I have to admit that spring in black & white really worked for me. I was 100% on board with this theme from the get-go. Not to disrespect the fantastic palette of colors that the spring days have to offer, but I'm just saying, I kind of enjoyed the view of the simpler side of the season. Such beauty in the monochrome details of your gardens and flowers, your trees, your children, and yourselves. Thank you for sharing these black & white beauties with us.

I hope you will take a moment this weekend to show us one of your favorite "spring in black & white" images. Please link up to your blog post or flickr image using the linky tool at the bottom of this post between now and Sunday night. And be sure to grab our button and spread the word.

We'll see you back here next week when we start musing on "landscapes". Wow, there have really been some beautiful submissions in the flickr pool for that theme, I can't wait to start reading the musings and posts.

Have a great weekend everyone!

~christy {urban muser}

Mosaic Muse
 

Thursday, May 10, 2012

what can black and white do for you?


Spring in black and white? Seriously? This was quite the challenge for me! How about you? Spring is all ABOUT color, isn't it? But the more I got to thinking about it, the more tangible it became, because spring is also about the lengthening of the sun's presence on our days, making it all about light. With that, my task became immensely easier to approach. And when you are able to focus on and see the light as you compose your shot, it generally does make photography immensely easier to approach. My subject often transcends the object itself and just becomes the light, which in the end makes for more interesting and sometimes technically better composition. Looking to the light for guidance, it simplifies the task at hand, as black and white itself also does, simplifying the number of elements to compose in the shot. I envision a really cool comparison study of how composition might change in the same shot when viewed in color verses black and white. Certainly I know that when shooting in black and white, my choice of subject has to change from the pretty, colorful scenes to those with interesting lines and elements. Ok, enough photography dorking from me today! But do you know what I mean? I'm pretty sure mayte_pons gets it, judging from her photo below. what I was grateful that this theme helped me simplify and get back to basics again. We all need a reminder of that now and then!


spring in black and white by mayte_pons

Happy Snapping! ~Cara of Cararosephotos.com




Wednesday, May 9, 2012

anything is possible


Spring is a season of renewals, rebirths and new beginnings. I love the sense of infinite possibilities in spring as we look ahead to the summer. Watching the buds and new leaves emerging slowly day by day, I never quite know how they will turn out until they choose to unveil themselves fully. With my only-half-green thumb, it's always a mystery whether my plants will return year after year. I find myself holding my breath, waiting and watching for the healthy bloom or new growth. And in those moments, before the plants are themselves beautiful, I believe that the beauty lies in the promise of them, of what they will become.

On a recent trip to Florida I was struck by the beckoning of the southern sun and the expanse of these flatlands. With puffy clouds high above and sparkling blue below, the land seemed to be offering to take me anywhere I wanted to go, echoing spring's wealth of possibilities. By removing the color and not including any identifying characteristics, I've given this image an anonymous, anywhere sort of quality.

As for the story behind this companion image from Red Kiwi Photography, the possibilities are endless. The vignette lends a slightly voyeuristic quality that encourages the imagination. I feel as though I could look on this image for ages crafting stories and intricate tales set here. Where is this little courtyard garden? What encounters - past or present, naughty or nice - will be happening here?

So with spring upon us, I ask of you: what stories will you craft and what tales will you weave with that camera of yours? The possibilities? They are endless.

Mae from Here in This House

To One in Paradise
To One in Paradise by Red Kiwi Photography
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Thank you Mae for guest musing with us today. If you'd like to know more about Mae, be sure to visit her at Here in This House or on her flickr stream. If you are interested in a future guest muse role, please email us at mortalmuses9 [at] gmail [dot] com.

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

there is mystery


Like Lindsey, when I think of Spring, I think of color being reborn into the world. Where I live in the Midwest of the United States, winter is fairly desolate, a colorless void. Thus, I look forward to the bursts of pink and green, the sprouts of yellow and purple, emerging from their hibernating slumber. So as I delved into "Spring in B&W," I started to notice something all together different. 

Black and white photography brings a totally different mood to the image and moment being captured. Compared to the eye candy of my last post, my photo today feels (and tastes!) very different. What intrigues me most about "Spring in B&W"is that it brings about a sense of mystery. I couldn't help but wonder what lies behind that ivy-covered window as I photographed this building. Similarly, in SuperDewa's dreamy Polaroid photo, what lies at the end of this tree-lined lane?

I'd love to hear your thoughts on looking at Spring through black and white. What do you notice? Did you see a mystery, too?

Meghan of Life Refocused

in between 
in between by SuperDewa

Monday, May 7, 2012

the end is where we start from


Here in the west we think of time as being laid out in a line, with a beginning and an end, but an older and more eastern view of time is that it’s circular. Think of a clock: when the hands reach twelve, time doesn’t stop or end but continues cycling round again and again. The end is the beginning, the beginning also the end. Life is a continual cycle of these endings and beginnings: the seasons, the days, the years, the tides, life, death. And it makes more sense to look at them as transformations from one thing to another, endlessly circling round. Winter doesn’t end one day and spring start the next – it happens in a merging of one season into another, the earth transforming itself again and again, year after year.

Circles are the stuff of life, not straight lines. Even space seems to be circular – if you were to keep walking in a straight line, you’d eventually end up back where you started. Maybe, if we were able to send a space ship into the universe and have it follow a straight line, it might also end up back where it started – we don’t know yet but it seems likely our universe is spherical. Our planets and stars and moons are round, and they circle round each other. Our bodies have circadian rhythms, and plants die and are absorbed into the earth only to decay and give life to new plants, and so the cycle goes on. Our experience of life is truly circular, as T S Eliot understood well:
'What we call the beginning is often the end. And to make an end is to make a beginning. The end is where we start from.'

This will be my last post as a Mortal Muse, and marks an ending but also a beginning. I’m sad to leave, but in the end lies new opportunity and a transforming of my life in another direction. And I hope to circle round again, doing some guest posts here, returning to the same familiar place but perhaps one that has seen some changes too, having been on its own cycle of change. (Each spring is both the same, and different.) I wish every success and happiness to my fellow muses and to you who read this blog; I hope the cycles of our lives will interlink in places and we’ll see each other again.

Elina's wonderful image gives us a real sense of the planet whirling round, and the rhythms and cycles of the clouds and the weather. My own photo reminds me of how small our worries and our selves are compared to the grand, universal, cycles of life.  And, yes, I know it's sepia and not black and white but I never shoot in black and white, and as it's my final post I think I can get away with it :-)

gilly of the camera points both ways

Can you hear your soul?
can you hear your soul? by elina_

Friday, May 4, 2012

the space between

{210/365 1v.2} Spring Idyll in Silver Shade

When you have two polar opposites, such as hot and cold, child and adult, black and white, there is usually something between them. I tend to be drawn to this between state, the fluid and the ambiguous and the potential.

In this context, "black and white" is a misleading name for a monochrome image in greytones. Of course you need the contrast between the black and the white, but even more important are the grey tones between the two extremes.

In my image above, what speaks of spring are the gorgeous greys of the Impossible Project Silver Shade film, the hint of leaves and flower petals along the otherwise stark branches.

Spring is in fact a between state in itself.

I write this on May Day, which in Ireland has been called Beltaine, the spring festival celebrated as the end of the dark season and the beginning of the season of growth.

The flipside of Beltaine is Samhain, which morphed into Hallowe'en in the US. On Samhain, folkloric tradition tells us, the veil between the world of the living and the world of the dead thins, ghosts walk abroad, and fairies move from their summer quarters to their winter dwellings.

So there is power in the between state, and we, as photographers, can harness this power.

Many of us, myself included, shoot fences – boundaries between yours and mine – for Fence Friday, and who among us have not taken our camera out during the blue hour between day and night? By shooting autumn leaves, we mark the death of summer and the coming of winter. We are always between one thing and another, once we start thinking about it.

Doors and windows are another favourite subject – remember when the Muses had that as a theme? - and this is what makes Ria's image below so powerful: The woman is poised on the brink, full of potential. What is waiting for her on the other side of that doorway? My guess is a perfect summer's day.

Jenny

Driven by a beating heart
Driven by a beating heart by RiaPereira
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Thank you Jenny for guest musing with us today. If you'd like to know more about Jenny, be sure to visit her flickr stream. If you are interested in a future guest muse role, please email us at mortalmuses9 [at] gmail [dot] com.

Thursday, May 3, 2012

void of color

I have to admit this was probably one of the hardest themes for me, I am inspired by color first and foremost. In its absence I'm a little lost. I know that I am not drawn to an object solely based on color. Palm tress aren't especially colorful but the are no wall flower either. When I looked up at the giant I was struck by the glistening palm fronds and its perfect symmetry. The light shining through lent itself for some good contrast so I decided this was a good candidate to concert to black and white.


I saw the same symmetry in this dandelion photo in the Mortal Muses Flickr group by Design by Nicola. I love dandelions in black and white, her composition and shallow depth of field make it float across the page.

Dandelion

The desert-scape void of all color has plenty of texture to play up. The noon day sun give the jumping cholla are misleadingly soft look. Don't be fooled these plants have the ability to eject needles (with force) if you brush up against it.


Lacey branches, rolling mounds of grass and a setting sun were all competing for attention in the color version. I quieted everything down by removing the color so the eye could float around and just enjoy the shapes for a little while.


Sometimes all you need to do to make a stronger visual impact is simplify your photo. You can achieve this without cropping by making it void of color. Try it on your next landscape on a photo with strong shapes or texture. See if converting it to black and white reveals something completely different and new.

Lindsey aka modchik

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

endless love

Somewhere inside of me beats a farmer's heart. As soon as the hint of spring rolls around, the urge to grow comes upon me and outrageous plans for that year's garden unfolds. Tomatoes, chilies, chard, peas...they all hold valuable real estate back there. If powdery mildew weren't such a problem (oh the nerve), I'd grow pumpkins, squash, zucchini, cucumbers and more. Being so caught up in a food growing craze, it wasn't until a few years ago that I embraced a new-found love for decorative perennials. We'd only planned to live in our tiny house for a few years. Instead of focusing on long-term growth, I threw my energy into veggies and watering impatients (what was I thinking). I'd already been on the herb wagon, so I had a firm appreciation for endless bounty. But it was only after accepting that our 5-year plan would be more like 10, that I threw my efforts into more decorative perennials and watched the action unfold.  

There's something satisfying about watching plants come up year after year, seeing them grow into something big, bold and beautiful. In a garden as small as mine, perennials that double take over, so eventually I get to spread the love around. Irises, Sweet William, Ajuga, Astilbe, Bleeding Hearts, Purple Coneflowers, Black-Eyed Susans...they were all gifts from family and friends. And likewise, I've shared my Thyme, Mint, Oregano, and Strawberries. I've even cut out the beginnings of a new lilac bush as mine began to spread. Just knowing that each and every plant out back came from a loving home with a story to tell warms my heart.  

I inherited these hostas one summer when a neighbor was rebuilding their home generously offering up their flowerbeds to our shovels before the dump trucks destroyed years of growth. I happily pounced upon that glorious beauty up there along with several clumps of Siberian Irises. And as gorgeous as she is in subtle shades of green, its really in black and white where she gets the chance to shine. I just divided her for the first time this year, and now I've got two gorgeous beauties out back gracing our back patio in style. When I saw Alison's hostas in the group pool, I couldn't help but wonder where they'd come from. Those raindrops glistening. The leaves about to unfold. Don't they look like they've got a special story to tell too?

Holly ~ Soupatraveler
monochrome blooming
monochrome blooming by ajbbents

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

abandoned

Abandoned Swings RS
I know that the beginnings of Spring should offer signs of hope and promise. I imagine kids swinging on playgrounds...playing hide and seek...anticipating all that summer has waiting for them. When I walk outside for even ten minutes, I can smell hints of optimism in the air as winter sheds its cold embrace. The sound of birds chirping keep reminding me to abandon my old and tired ways...they keep reminding me to be inspired...they keep reminding me to let go of the past and seize the future. I can feel that new life is on the horizon...and yet, when I intentionally search for new life, I am confronted with emptiness.

Old, rusty, desolate playgrounds such as the one in mthoodmama's photo...where are the children? Where are the flowers? Where is the laughter and the joy and the spirit that I thought I'd find here? Children have a way of bringing color into our lives. They see the world in a much better light than I think we do as adults. So where are they? It's possible that my eyes have deceived me, but it all seems black and white to me. 

Perhaps if I simply close my eyes for a moment...then reopen, the skies would lift their clouds. The rain would disappear and life would re-emerge as though I was seeing it through a child's eyes. That's the Spring I have been waiting for these past few months and that's the Spring I shall imagine. For "Spring in Black and White" is less about what our eyes see and more about whether or not our hearts are open to the possibilities of a life in vibrant color. Are you open?

Until next time,
Ashley of Ramblings and Photos
Abandoned
abandoned by mthoodmama

Monday, April 16, 2012

spring in black and white

Remember how we did Winter in black and white? Well it's time to look at Spring in monochrome. Even Miles can barely contain his excitement!


Why don't you try taking a picture of a lazy breakfast in morning haze of Spring? Break out a roll of film and give it a go like Cara.


hazy lazy breakfast, ilford, self-developed.

hazy lazy breakfast, ilford, self-developed. by tumbleweed.in.eden

Or try taking a self-portrait, like Christy.

sometimes i just want to fade away

sometimes i just want to fade away by Urban Muser

Meghan has been enjoying the lovely light that you get in Spring. She took this with her iPhone.

gosh I love a window #shadow #photoadayapril

gosh I love a window by meghan davidson

And Lindsey has been appreciating tree silhouettes with epic Spring light before the leaves finally appear for Summer.

Solo

solo by lindsey G (modchik)

Please share your black and white shots in our flickr pool. We can't wait to see what you've been up to!

kirstin of fleeting moments