We move rapidly into the second half of summer and many plants and wildflowers loose already their lush color and started drying up. I wanted to make a photo of this fern since quite some time because its shape and pattern fascinates me. It has a bold graphic and I like to see it on my office wall. I had a first try a few days ago already but didn’t like my results. But today I realized I was almost running out of time because many of the ferns down in the Little Maquoketa Valley started loosing shape.
The Carl Zeiss Distagon T*, 35 mm, f/2 ZF with its manual focus is a great lens for this kind of photo. Closing it down to f/16 gave me enough depth of field for all leaves being in focus, even the ones in the second and third layer behind the front. Exposure time dropped to 1/13 s and therefore it was important not having any wind. I shoot more than 99% of my photos by using the viewfinder for composition and focus. Because the camera was low on the tripod and with only manual focus it made sense to use the screen in the back of the D750 instead of the viewfinder. It’s hard to break old habits but I actually liked it this way. It allowed me to keep my eye glasses on the whole time (I usually take them off while shooting through the viewfinder). This would not work with a moving critter and most of my wildlife photography but I start reconsidering how I may photograph landscapes in the future. I believe it makes me more thinking about composition, about what is in the frame and what is not…