I happened across this pair of leaves hanging from a tree last evening while walking along my local creek. The shape of the dried leaves was the first thing to catch my eye. Then as I looked closer, I noticed that each leaf seemed to have a pod right at its base. I'm not sure what this tree is but it interested me enough to make a few images. Any suggestions would be appreciated.
Canon Rebel XT; Sigma 150mm Macro lens, Canon 430 EX Flash with LumiQuest Softbox, handheld
Thanks Jules. I'm not quite sure why but all my images from that evening (these leaves and the Hopper-On-Teasel) look cold. I'm not sure if it is something in the Rebel or my settings or what. I want to check it out the next time I head out.
In the meantime, I have decided to warm up this image as well. What do you think?
Hey there, totally agree with Denise regarding FG and BG preference. You could try to combine the images.
Reg. the strange leaves: they look like leaves of a normal tree (but I'm not an expert on American species) which have been deformed galls formed by infection by gall midges (Cecidomyidae) or gall wasps (Cynipidae). They lay their eggs in the leaves, by which gall formation is induced . Basically this is just plant tissue growing wild. The gall material serves as nutrition and shelter for the larvae once the eggs have hatched. Some fungi can induce similar deformities, but judging by what seem to be holes in the gall (from which the imagos have crawled out), that is not the case here.
- Jerry -