In previous posts I wrote about my excursion on March 20, 2025, to a local University Riparian Preserve where I found plenty of vine tendrils.
I took the FEATURED IMAGE (f/5.6, 1/250s, ISO 200) with a macro lens (105 macro from Nikon). The image was illuminated with an off-camera flash through a diffuser, to freeze the subject and to isolate it against a dark background. It portrays the looping tendrils spreading their curves in the downward direction (towards the ground) and holding on to a fence. The Fibonacci spiral it forms aids the composition.
A short spring project
I have written several posts on the benefits of working in projects and series.
The Looping Vine Tendril is my first botanical project of 2025, and so far it’s the only one. I haven’t been as inspired as I used to be, and spring is soon going to be over. May tends to be windy, dry. And the plants are bracing for the scorching summer. I have done very little photography lately as a result.
Previous posts on this project:
- Photographing the exquisite Looping Vine Tendrill;
- Photographing the exquisite Looping Vine Tendrill, part 2;
- Photographing the exquisite Looping Vine Tendril, part 3.
Photographs associated with this project:






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Wall Art landscapes and miscellaneous
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