Iris ensata 'Azuma Kagami'
I originally got this cool Iris ensata 'Azuma-kagami' as a bare root plant from White Flower Farms, planted it in my garden, and forgot about it. Yesterday, we saw this flower. It struck me as surpassingly beautiful, and I photographed it yesterday and today in-studio.
For this shot, I photographed the Iris ensata 'Azuma-kagami' (I do like how the name of this flower rolls off my tongue) vertically with a light box behind it. I lit the flower from the front with a tungsten spot equipped with a diffuser and barn doors.
To make the photograph, I used my 85mm perspective correction Nikon lens. This is a really neat hunk of glass, but entirely manual. You even have to stop the diaphragm down manually with a push button when you're ready to make the exposure. Weird to be so analog in the digital era, but hey if it works...
The base exposure on the Iris ensata 'Azuma-kagami' is (at ISO 100) 3 seconds and f/48 (one of the nice things about this lens is how far it stops down). I layered in a second, darker exposure for parts of the flower at 2 seconds (still at f/48).
Related stories: Iris, Scanning the Iris.
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