Hi Kyle, very colorful shots I would crop the empty space on the left in #1 , IMO it looks better this way.
Very nice, I prefer shooting at nurseries, they usually name the flower and it shortens my research time.
Very nice Kyle, the crop works for me
Thanks David! I agree, the crop is much nicer.
I really like the last image. The flower is colourful and there is something in the background that does not vie for attention but adds extra texture. I would really work on that one but that is only my thoughts.
Ole
The last one is called selective colouring. (I think the term do not have a u in the word colour but I am used to typing 'u'). Anyway, between 1 and 2 of the first installment and the edit, I like #2 but you will have to remove the brown dead bits in the shot, like in #2, the lower part of one of the petals have this distracting brown dead flower left by the other flower at the back and also at the RHS. I think you should put this flower in the Warp function of Photoshop so you can eliminate and direct the stem to the corner of the frame or smething like that...just a suggestion.
Thanks for the comments Ole and Izzie.
For us Canadians it has a 'u' in it. Colour vs Color. Canadian English vs American English.
Yeah I noticed how distracting those were before I posted it. I tried removing them but I find the spot removal tool on Lightroom frustrating when you have a large area to fix. I'm having trouble getting it to blend in. Also I don't have access to Photoshop right now but if I do get it again, I'll try that warp tool.
I hear you on the frustration with the LightRoom spot removal tool! I haven't tried Photoshop, the learning curve is intimidating, but the Light Room spot removal might be enough to induce me to change. I recently spent way too much time trying to clean up an image that ended up being deleted anyway.
Hi Kyle, crop of #1 looks very nice to me
#2 has a less distracting background but I would clone out the dead bloom in the lower left background.
I think these flowers are what we call Day Lillies - so named because the bloom only lasts a day or so.