As soon as the snowdrops and crocuses come above the ground in January, I start preparing my macro lenses for the first macro shoot of the year. This was not entirely the case this year because during the short frost period I used my macro lenses to photograph mushrooms with frost on their heads.
While the first snowdrops were already blooming, beautiful winter mornings with fog presented themselves and there was ice on the puddles again, unfortunately I didn't have the strength to photograph, Covid had taken away my body's powers and energy. After weeks of recovery, and that is still going on, I found the courage in my garden to make some images of these beautiful spring bloomers between intense coughing and with the necessary moments of rest. This time I had the idea to make less registering images of the crocuses and to concentrate more on the abstract shapes that become visible when you carefully place the lens in the flowers.
In addition to the crocuses, I have also made a few images of the snowdrops in the last week in my garden. I used more or less the same method which I used for the crocuses for the snowdrops. Sometimes I use an old mirror to soften the background and to use the reflections of the colors in the mirror. To soften the background a little bit more I greased the mirror with some vaseline. To enhance the white in the image, I used a plastic sandwich bag, sometimes it works and sometimes the image looks better just natural.
Finally the daffodils, I don't have much experience with these beautiful yellow flowers in the grass and I am experimenting with my 100-400 mm lens, a first experience below.