Somebody said, It's not what something looks like but what it looks like in a photograph - or words to that effect. I don't particularly like roses - thorny green sticks with the occasional pompom of colour atop - but I think they can be used to make interesting photographs.
These images were shot in the botanic garden, hand held on a day with a restless wind and scudding cloud. (Best viewed in lytebox)
1. I wanted to show the curve of the petal in this picture. When seen in isolation I think it is sensous. And if I had noticed those tiny drops of moisture I would have attempted to focus on them but they weren't visible to my bespectacled eye.
Roseness - Wave_M8A8602 copy 2 by Foot Loose2012, on Flickr
2. Since roses generally support sizable colonies of insects, I wondered how bugs see them. Coloured mountains? Cliffs? Waves? The shape of these petals remind of the opera house.
Roseness_M8A8713 copy by Foot Loose2012, on Flickr
3. When the outer covering first starts to peel away and the young blossom is first revealed to the world... I think it is kind of erotic... Though I guess the bugs see a new feast ....
Roseness - Revealed_M8A8731 copy by Foot Loose2012, on Flickr
Well, I am still at the bottom of the learning curve with the macro lens. All C&C welcome.