The Garden Photography Workshop: Expert Tips and Techniques for Capturing the Essence of Your Garden

The Garden Photography Workshop: Expert Tips and Techniques for Capturing the Essence of Your Garden

by Andrea Jones
The Garden Photography Workshop: Expert Tips and Techniques for Capturing the Essence of Your Garden

The Garden Photography Workshop: Expert Tips and Techniques for Capturing the Essence of Your Garden

by Andrea Jones

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Overview

Learn to take better garden photos!
 
One of the most rewarding aspects of gardening is sharing its beauty, both physically with those who visit and virtually with those who only see it on a screen. But capturing a garden’s true essence is difficult, and often the moments worth sharing are ephemeral. In The Garden Photography Workshop, internationally known garden photographer Andrea Jones shares the trade secrets that make her photos sing. You’ll learn the basic photography skills and tips on using a range of camera equipment. Profiles of real gardens from around the world exemplify the most common problems a photographer can face, like harsh light, wet weather, and cramped spaces, along with advice and techniques for addressing specific concerns. We live in a photo-driven world, and this helpful guide is a complete tutorial for anyone who wants that world to be filled with beautiful images of gardens and plants.
 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781604697865
Publisher: Timber Press, Incorporated
Publication date: 03/08/2017
Sold by: Hachette Digital, Inc.
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
File size: 43 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Andrea Jones specializes in photographs of landscape architecture, gardens, and plants. Her work regularly appears in House & Garden, Country Living, Gardens Illustrated, The Daily Telegraph, The Times, Sunset, Organic Gardening, Fine Gardening, and GardenDesign. She runs a stock photo library called Garden Exposures. Jones is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts and exhibits her work around the world. She has been recognized with multiple awards from the UK’s Garden Media Guild.

Read an Excerpt

Introduction: Why Photograph Your Garden?
Gardens are ephemeral. Yet they linger long in our imaginations and they bind us with invisible tendrils, occupying our thoughts and developing ideas in our heads when we are elsewhere or engaged in other pursuits.

I have spent at least a couple of decades attempting to capture the essence of gardens, to “fix” their magical moments and uncover their secrets. I have discovered that it is through the lens that a garden truly reveals itself to me, and through my images I can often surprise the gardener who has designed, created, and tended it.
Every garden has a unique beauty. In the course of my work I have photographed a huge range, from magnificent royal palaces to small domestic yards, finding something original in all of them. No matter how grand or modest, each of these gardens is the endeavour of someone with a unique vision who has been willing to expend energy and passion in order to see that vision flourish.

For those of us who love to plan and plant, coax the wayward growth of climbers, and clear the weeds that would smother small treasures, capturing in pictures the unfolding seasons or the tiny details of buds and bark is almost irresistible. Now that digital cameras are so inexpensive, smart phones always at hand, and tablets so user-friendly, it has never been easier to catch that instant when the first snowdrop emerges or when you draw back the curtains on an autumn morning to discover that, overnight, the leaves of your maple tree have fallen in a perfect, scarlet circle.

Beyond these simple pleasures. the reasons that gardeners choose to photograph their gardens are myriad. Printed garden photographs transform into cards, calendars, or photo books—the perfect gift or keepsake for reflection and observation—and it’s now easier than ever to create a visual diary on social media with one tap of a smart phone button. More practically, photographing your garden can help you remember which planting combinations worked and which ones didn’t, when you planted or harvested from one year to the next, or how a garden construction project progressed. Capturing images to promote personal businesses or to entice visitors for fundraising opportunities are just a few more reasons why we may find ourselves wandering around the garden, camera in hand.
In talking to gardeners and from my own experience, I know that for various reasons these snatched photographs of our gardens can often be disappointing, failing to capture the brilliance of the moment. Yet this needn’t be the case. With just a little more know-how and the willingness to practise and experiment, you can overcome many of the obstacles to taking great images.

You certainly don’t need to have a showpiece garden in order to be enthralled by your outdoor space. Neither do you have to be a professional photographer to achieve the images you desire. By training your eye and adopting and practising a few new techniques, it is possible to achieve photographs that are rich in detail, reflecting your garden as you truly see it or in some cases making it look even better than it is. Above all, you should really be enjoying the process.
Mine is a garden in the making, a long-term project only recently begun. By continually photographing it I am charting its evolution, capturing the changes through the seasons and from year to year as it flourishes. While it remains immature I love to use small corners as stage sets for containers of herbs or spring bulbs or any number of other garden projects, relishing the images they give me of fresh greens or vibrant colours. My husband, Alasdair, will end up using some of the photographs—the wider views of our garden and our wonderful local landscape in Scotland’s Stinchar Valley—on his B&B blog to record the passing of the seasons where we live.

I have to admit to being slightly obsessed with photographing my own garden, and it’s always the light that draws me out. When my garden is bathed in the golden light of early morning or in the golden hour before the sun goes down, I will often grab a camera and rush outdoors or to a window, intent on capturing the effect before it is lost. And herein lies the challenge, one that you might have encountered too, because this approach is unlike the way that I photograph for books and magazines—sometimes watching the weather closely for days or even weeks, planning each shot in advance, and even setting up before sunrise to be ready for that moment when the light is perfect. When it comes to my own garden, I am usually in the middle of doing something else when the light catches my eye. So I have to respond instinctively and react quickly to circumstances instead of anticipating them.

I understand just how tricky it can be to make split-second decisions about equipment, angles, and apertures while the sun is quickly climbing higher and higher or that coveted frost is starting to melt. Under such circumstances, familiarity with your garden and camera equipment, whatever you have, will always pay dividends. By practising some new techniques you’ll be able to make your photographs more exciting yet reliable, and be ready for that magical moment when it comes.
 

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