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Kyoto Plum-Blossom Preview
Plum blossoms at the Zuishin'in Temple, Kyoto Japan
Nikon D50 + Nikkor 28-80mm f/3.3-5.6 @ 80 mm — 1/800 sec, f/5.6, ISO 200 — full exif
Plum Blossoms at the Zuishin'in Temple
March, 2006 — Photos by Katsunori Shimada

In the last week or two I've started to notice some early blossoms around town. As far as I know, plum are the earliest, so that's what I assume they are. They tend to have much deeper, richer colors than cherry blossoms, and so can be more striking in one sense, but also more concrete and mortal in another. (Cherry blossoms, on the other hand, when experienced first hand, definitely lean toward “intangible” and “ethereal”.)

Last year I posted my first blossom pictures on Valentine's day. It seems that this year I've had a cold pretty much straight since then, so no fresh blossom pictures yet. Since no one liked the ultra-puffy late-blooming cherry blossoms in last week's Kyoto Cherry-Blossom Preview, I'll try some plum blossoms from my archive.

The photos on today's post were taken by my friend Katsunori Shimada two years ago, on a visit we made together to the Zuishin-in Temple) near where he lives in the Yamashina ward of Kyoto. It seems that I neglected to geoencode his photos, but they're taken at the same locations as my pictures from the same trip that I posted at the time, which do have “map” links.

Plum blossoms at the Zuishin'in Temple, Kyoto Japan
Nikon D50 + Nikkor 28-80mm f/3.3-5.6 @ 50 mm — 1/400 sec, f/5.6, ISO 200 — full exif
Temple Wall
Photo by Katsunori Shimada
Plum blossoms at the Zuishin'in Temple, Kyoto Japan
Nikon D50 + Nikkor 28-80mm f/3.3-5.6 @ 80 mm — 1/500 sec, f/5.6, ISO 200 — full exif
Plum-Blossom Detail
Photo by Katsunori Shimada

It was an exceptionally bright day, so the shadow contrast was harsh. You can often make bright sunshine work to your advantage with fall foliage, but it's a bigger challenge for the more delicate nature of blossoms. Since posting my own shots two years ago, I've learned a bit how to compensate for strong contrast after the fact (in Lightroom, I lower the contrast, then raise the vibrancy to restore the color lost in the first step), so pictures on today's post may come out a bit more realistic.


Nikon D50 + Nikkor 28-80mm f/3.3-5.6 @ 28 mm — 1/250 sec, f/8, ISO 200 — full exif
Me, Showing my Good Side
Photo by Katsunori Shimada

The Zuishin'in temple's gardens are nicely laid out with layers of color. If I can get over this cold, I'd like to head back there with Shimada-san to see whether I couldn't do better than I did last time.

Plum blossoms and other colors, at the gardens of the Zuishin'in Temple, Kyoto Japan
Nikon D50 + Nikkor 28-80mm f/3.3-5.6 @ 60 mm — 1/640 sec, f/6.3, ISO 200 — full exif
Various Pinks
Photo by Katsunori Shimada
Lady tries to photograph plum blossoms with her cell phone, at the Zuishin'in Temple, Kyoto Japan
Nikon D50 + Nikkor 28-80mm f/3.3-5.6 @ 28 mm — 1/320 sec, f/9, ISO 200 — full exif
Camera-Phone Lady
Photo by Katsunori Shimada

Hah, he also took a picture of the lady trying to get a blossom picture with her camera phone. It's quite a common sight, but with the quality of phone cameras today, it's perhaps not as silly as it was two years ago.

Shimada-san is an excellent photographer with a natural, innate sense of composition, so it's unfortunate for us that he doesn't do it more. A collection of a few fall-foliage snapshots he took is one of the most popular posts on my blog, ever (see the “Hall of Fame” in the sidebar on my blog home page). Also on my blog are a dozen of his photos that I used for a calendar.


Comments so far....

Love your flower pictures. Are you sure they are plum and not apricot trees? Cheers

e

— comment by elvirarita on March 14th, 2008 at 8:40pm JST (8 months ago) comment permalink
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