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Poppy Anemones

Poppy Anemones

I always love photographing poppy anemones. Whether I’m photographing them at a local garden or in my studio, I always find so many different ways to photograph them. Here are a few poppy anemone photos I’ve edited recently.

 

Lavender Poppy Anemones

Lavender Poppy Anemone © 2017 Patty Hankins

Lavender Poppy Anemone © 2017 Patty Hankins

 

Lavender Poppy Anemone © 2017 Patty Hankins

Lavender Poppy Anemone © 2017 Patty Hankins

 

Lavender Poppy Anemone © 2017 Patty Hankins

Lavender Poppy Anemone © 2017 Patty Hankins

Bright Pink Poppy Anemone

Bright Pink Poppy Anemone © 2018 Patty Hankins

Bright Pink Poppy Anemone © 2018 Patty Hankins

 

Bright Pink Poppy Anemone © 2018 Patty Hankins

Bright Pink Poppy Anemone © 2018 Patty Hankins

Pink & White Poppy Anemones

Pink & White Poppy Aneomones © 2019 Patty Hankins

Pink & White Poppy Aneomones © 2019 Patty Hankins

 

Pink & White Poppy Aneomones © 2019 Patty Hankins

Pink & White Poppy Aneomones © 2019 Patty Hankins

 

Pink & White Poppy Aneomones © 2019 Patty Hankins

Pink & White Poppy Aneomones © 2019 Patty Hankins

 

Pink & White Poppy Aneomones © 2019 Patty Hankins

Pink & White Poppy Aneomones © 2019 Patty Hankins

A Wonderful Spring Morning at Lewis Ginter Botanical Gardens

A Wonderful Spring Morning at Lewis Ginter Botanical Gardens

A couple weeks ago, I spent a few hours photographing at Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden in Richmond, Virginia. One of things I love about Lewis Ginter is their daffodils – in the spring they have so many beautiful daffodils throughout the gardens. The other great thing about Lewis Ginter is that it is about 100 miles south of Washington DC so spring arrives a couple of weeks earlier there than it does here.

It seems like every year, just as I’m about to go crazy from what feels like a never-ending winter – I start seeing photos of spring flowers taken at Lewis Ginter. And I decide I need to make a quick trip to Richmond.

This year I photographed daffodils, grape hyacinths and dwarf irises on my early spring visit.

Cum Laude Daffodils © 2019 Patty Hankins

Cum Laude Daffodils © 2019 Patty Hankins

 

Gigantic Star Daffodils © 2019 Patty Hankins

Gigantic Star Daffodils © 2019 Patty Hankins

 

Grape Hyacinths © 2019 Patty Hankins

Grape Hyacinths © 2019 Patty Hankins

 

Dwarf Irises © 2019 Patty Hankins

Dwarf Irises © 2019 Patty Hankins

I’m sure I’ll be back photographing at Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden again soon. But I wanted to share this wonderful taste of spring with you in case you are in as much need of spring as I am

 

Vienna Waltz Chrysanthemum – New Photo

Vienna Waltz Chrysanthemum – New Photo

I’ve recently added a new photograph – Vienna Waltz Chrysanthemum – to my website at https://beautifulflowerpictures.com/store/mum-vienna-waltz/

Vienna Waltz Chrysanthemum © 2019 Patty Hankins

Vienna Waltz Chrysanthemum © 2019 Patty Hankins

I love seeing chrysanthemums at the local gardens in the fall. They bring such wonderful splashes of color and texture to what is often becoming a brown landscape. These Vienna Waltz Chrysanthemums, with their purple and white petals and the bright yellow petal tips made me smile when I saw them. I knew I had to photograph them and share their beauty with the world.

This photograph is available matted to 11 X 14 for $ 54 or 16 X 20 for $ 109.

Mt. Cuba Center

Mt. Cuba Center

I’ve had a few questions about some of the gardens we’ll be visiting during my Photographing the Gardens of Philadelphia workshop in May.

Mt. Cuba Center is a native-plant garden located in Hockessin, Delaware. The center is located on the former estate of Lammont Dupont Copeland and his wife Pamela Cunningham Copeland. The Copelands moved to the area in the 1930s and over the next few decades developed formal gardens on their estate. In the 1960’s, they became interested in ecology and conservation of native plants. Landscape architect Seth Kelsey was hired to add woodland wildflower gardens and other native plant environments. Starting in the 1980’s, the Copelands expanded the scope of the native-plant studies on the estate and began to offer tours of their collection. After the Copelands died, their estate became a public garden. In 2013, the gardens opened to the public for general admission.

Currently, Mt. Cuba Center encompasses over 500 acres of natural lands dedicated to native plants. There are formal gardens, hills, streams, valleys and forests brimming with wildflowers.

These are a few of the spring-time  photos I’ve taken at Mt. Cuba Center to give you an idea of what we might see in May.

May Apples

May Apples © 2019 Patty Hankins

May Apples © 2019 Patty Hankins

 

Yellow Trillium

Yellow Trillium © 2019 Patty Hankins

Yellow Trillium © 2019 Patty Hankins

 

Blue Flag Irises

Blue Flag Irises © 2019 Patty Hankins

Blue Flag Irises © 2019 Patty Hankins

 

Yellow Lady’s Slipper

Yellow Lady's Slipper © 2019 Patty Hankins

Yellow Lady’s Slipper © 2019 Patty Hankins

 

Trillium Discolor

Trillium Discolor © 2017 Patty Hankins

Trillium Discolor © 2017 Patty Hankins

 

A Peaceful Moment at the Pond

A Peaceful Moment at the Pond © 2017 Patty Hankins

A Peaceful Moment at the Pond © 2017 Patty Hankins

Twisted Trillium

Twisted Trillium © 2019 Patty Hankins

Twisted Trillium © 2019 Patty Hankins

 

Irises at the Pond

Irises at the Pond © 2019 Patty Hankins

Irises at the Pond © 2019 Patty Hankins

Mt. Cuba Center is just one of the gardens we’ll visit during my Photographing the Gardens of Philadelphia Workshop in May. For more information about the workshop, visit https://beautifulflowerpictures.com/store/photographing-the-gardens-of-philadelphia-may-2019/  

I’d love to have you join me for a week of photographing some of the beautiful gardens in the Philadelphia area.

If you missed the first two articles about the gardens we’ll be visiting, you can read about Chanticleer Garden at https://www.beautifulflowerpictures.com/blog/chanticleer-garden/  and Shofuso Japanese House and Gardens at https://www.beautifulflowerpictures.com/blog/shofuso-japanese-house-and-gardens/

A Few Peonies

A Few Peonies

A couple years ago, I photographed several beautiful peony gardens. Here are a few more of the peony photos I took that year that somehow I haven’t shared with you yet

 

At Chanticleer Gardens outside of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Peonies © 2019 Patty Hankins

Peonies © 2019 Patty Hankins

 

Pink Peony © 2019 Patty Hankins

Pink Peony © 2019 Patty Hankins

 

In the Cutting Garden, Chanticleer Gardens © 2019 Patty Hankins

In the Cutting Garden, Chanticleer Gardens © 2019 Patty Hankins

 

In the Cutting Garden, Chanticleer Gardens © 2019 Patty Hankins

In the Cutting Garden, Chanticleer Gardens © 2019 Patty Hankins

 

At Winterthur Gardens near Wilmington, Delaware

Peony © 2019 Patty Hankins

Peony © 2019 Patty Hankins

 

Peony © 2019 Patty Hankins

Peony © 2019 Patty Hankins

 

Peonies © 2019 Patty Hankins

Peonies © 2019 Patty Hankins

Kournan Kouryou Chrysanthemum – New Photo

Kournan Kouryou Chrysanthemum – New Photo

Kournan Kouryou Chrysanthemum © 2019 Patty Hankins

Kournan Kouryou Chrysanthemum © 2019 Patty Hankins

 

 

I’ve recently added a new photo – Kournan Kouryou Chrysanthemum – to my website at  https://beautifulflowerpictures.com/store/kournankouryouchrysanthemum/

When I saw these incredible chyrsanthemums at a local garden, I knew I had to photograph them. At first, I photographed a single mum. And then a close up of the center. And then a pair of them. As I continued to explore the garden, all of a sudden I found a large group of these spectacular mums planted very close together, so their blossoms pushed up against each other. So rather than seeing a separate flower, I saw continuous waves of motion as my moved from petal to petal, and flower to flower.

This photograph is available matted to 12 X 20 for $ 84 and 16 X 24 for $ 134