Ok so I know this isn’t exactly an Oblivion Gate. But it reminds me of that thing on the cover of the Elder Scrolls IV box art that…summons an Oblivion Gate? I forget, exactly. It’s been a while since I played the game. But that giant tooth-looking stone edifice is pretty memorable, and it’s the first thing I thought of–albeit rotated 90 degrees–when I took this photo.
The story of this photo begins over a decade ago, when I took this shot with my Nikon D7100 and 50mm f/1.8 lens. I don’t know what kind of plant this is, but its leaves are such incredible, deep shades of red, green, and yellow that it’s practically perfect for pictures–especially after a nice bout of rain. I think about that picture often when I walk through the formal gardens on the OSU campus where I shot it, and those plants have been the subject of many of my photos in the years since. And so on a recent rainy afternoon as I was on a quick break between Zoom meetings at work, I took my Nikon D750 and 105mm macro lens to the same spot where I got the original shot all those years ago, and took the picture you see today.
I deviated a bit from what has become my normal close-up aperture of f/8 and stopped down to f/13, which gave me an exposure of 1/180 second at ISO 2000 when using my standard Auto-ISO settings. I only took a couple photos of the leaf and did just a bit of editing in Lightroom to get what you see here–highlights, shadows, texture, and of course, AI Denoise to make it ultra smooth despite a bit of noise and grain in the original RAW. No cropping or rotating at all, and the only other notable edit was removing a blurry leaf in the lower-left corner with the eraser tool in Lightroom. Nothing major, and nothing that significantly altered the composition at all.
I really like the simplicity of this photo. It’s a clear, easy-to-understand subject in front of a blurry background. The colors are bright and beautiful, and the rain adds a sense of richness and dimensionality to the shot that isn’t normally present on a dry day. Everything here just kind of works, and works well, and serves as a good reminder of why I like photography so much in the first place.



