I remember years ago, when I first got my old-school Nikon D200 and 50mm f/1.8 lens, taking a picture of the tiny yellow crocus flowers in our front yard and being hit with the realization that yes, I could, in fact, get cool photos with my camera. Such images weren’t out of reach, the purview of a small group of experts with thousands of dollars of camera gear. All I needed was some basic equipment and, most importantly, a bit of knowledge of how photography works: exposure, lighting, composition, and the like. Ever since then (I really mean it. We still live in the same house, and I think about those early photography lessons a lot.) I have found myself returning to those same kinds of settings to kind of revisit the scenarios I encountered over a decade ago. And so, that’s kind of what we have here: a crocus flower growing in the same spot as the ones I took photos of way back in…what was it. 2012 or 2013? Who knows :)
We (me, my wife, and our kids) first noticed the familiar crocus flowers poking up about two weeks before I took this photo, and for several days my reaction was one of pleasant familiarity–despite everything going on in the world, here were these same little yellow flowers showing up once again after a long, dry winter. I honestly didn’t think too much about taking a picture because I couldn’t quite shake the feeling of been there, done that. Why take yet a photo of the same yellow flowers when there are so many other things that I could capture instead?
The answer to that rhetorical question, the same answer that has come to me many times over the years and was so eloquently stated by GameInformer editor Brian Shea, is simple: Joy is reason enough. Why take my camera out to the same spot in our yard for a photo of the same flowers? Because it’s fun. It’s enjoyable. And that’s really all the reason I, or anyone else, really needs.
And so as my kids were getting ready for school, and the sun had just started shining on the horizon through a layer of wispy early-morning clouds, I decided I would grab my Nikon D750 and 105mm f/2.8 macro lens and go out to get a shot of the crocuses. I didn’t have too much time to work with since I also had to get going to work, so I just set my aperture to f/8 which, I have learned, is a pretty solid all-around choice when taking close-up shots like this. (Basically, if you’re not sure what aperture to use, just go with f/8 and don’t worry about it.) I composed the shot so as to keep the green arms sprouting from the base of the plant in the frame and angled myself with our house behind me and our neighbor’ yard across the street in the background.
That decision resulted in an unexpected surprise, and a fun addition to this familiar flower photo. The bright band of yellow going across the photo is not a field of additional crocuses, but instead the sun bathing our neighbor’s yard in early-morning light. I really didn’t expect that, but it’s one of those fun benefits of taking pictures in the early morning: the light just hits different, and makes for the kinds of photos you really can’t get any other time of the day.
I doubt this will be the last picture of a yellow front-yard crocus flower you will see here on Weekly Fifty. Indeed, I certainly hope it’s not! But though it might win point for originality, it does make me smile, and that’s good enough for me :)



