Originally Posted by
FrankMi
I applaud you for being willing to reach out and experiment with new ways of seeing the subjects, Nicola!
I hope my feedback doesn't come across as being harsh but it is given with the most sincere of intentions.
In the first image, the boards and top flower are sharp and the background and bottom flower are out of focus. The thing that is messing with my mind is that the bottom flower appears to be in front of the top flower and behind the boards. My mind is confused by going from the board (sharp) to the front flower (blurred) to the back flower (sharp) to be background (blurred). It may be that the bottom flower is actually further back than the top flower but even if it is, the stalk above and behind the bottom flower is in sharper focus.
In the second image, the board and background is out of focus and the flower is in focus but the flower appears to be in the same plane, and maybe just slightly closer than the board on the right given the position of the right-hand pedals. The flower is sharp from the closest pedals to the furthest stem so the appearance is one of significant DoF but the DoF doesn't take in the board.
In the first image, if you were soften the boards and sharpen the bottom flower, I think the DoF would be more natural.
Likewise, in the second image, if the left-hand board were more in focus and the right-hand board remained soft, it too, would be more believable. One additional thing you could try is to blend the focus of the left-hand board from soft on the left side, to sharp on the right side where it gets close to the flower. That would give the feeling that you were shooting at an angle from the left so the DoF would be, from the left and across the image, soft to sharp (at the flower) and back to soft. This should allow the entire flower to be sharp and still accentuate the expected DoF.
Hope this helps and doesn't sound overly critical.