Over the last several years, one of my favorite photography locations I keep returning to time and time again is Theta Pond on the OSU Campus. I don’t really have location data on my photos, but if I did some kind of heat map I bet there would be a giant blob right in this section of the OSU campus where hundreds, perhaps thousands, of students (not to mention faculty, staff, and just members of the general public) walk past each day. It’s an outstanding place to get photos, but also take a brief respite from the daily rigors of working on a college campus.
The pond is surrounded by cypress and magnolia trees, some of which tower above the landscape but others, such as the one you see here, that are smaller, somewhat spindly, and produce beautiful purple flowers that are quite unlike almost any others I can recall seeing. As I walked past this tree I saw this flower bud that looked like it would have some picture potential, though I wasn’t quite sure exactly what to do with it. Should I try moving around so it would be backlit? What about taking a picture from above or below? What else should be in the frame? Lots of possibilities for sure, but I didn’t have all day and even if I did, I wasn’t about to spend more than a few minutes on this photo. I cared, but…not that much :)
I soon realized that if I included the fountain behind the flower it might give me a unique background that seemed a bit more interesting, and compelling, than brick walls or green grass that I was seeing when I positioned myself at other points around the flower. I dialed in an aperture of f/8 and took a few shots where that bright spot of blurry light was to the left of the flower–just as you see here. The more I looked at the results I was getting in my camera, the less I liked it. I thought the focus of the photo should be the flower, of course, and ended up shifting my point of view just a bit so that the bokeh ball was on the right side and the fountain, which is more of a white blur in the end result, was filling the spot vacated by the light. Ah, that’s more like it. I thought to myself as I fired off a couple shots and then went back to my office.
Except…when I got home from work and loaded the images into Lightroom, I found myself strangely drawn to the original composition that you see here. Everything about it was more pleasing, and more balanced, than the other version. The off-center flower looked much better with the spot of light to its left. The diagonal branch cutting vertically through the frame, combined with branches below and to the right, created a set of triangles that just kind of felt right.
And that’s probably my main takeaway here: taking a good photo isn’t always, or even often, about achieving mathematical, metaphysical, perfection. Sometimes you just have to go with your instinct and take a picture (or multiple picture, and then select one for your blog) that feels right. Even if you can’t exactly explain why you like it, liking it alone is reason enough.



