Daffodils are one of the first flowers that come up in the spring here in Ohio. I was asked by a client to create two photographs of the 100,000 + daffodils that are planted in their front yard. People stop their cars to look at the spring flowers. Neighbors out walking stop and take selfies; people bring their children over to take photographs with the daffodils in the background. For a few short weeks it is quite a show of color when we need it after the winter. This year more than most with all of us sheltered in place it was great to see that spring had come. My client wanted two 30” x 15” panorama photographs that he could hang in his office. I went over three times to create photographs. First, I went over to scout the location. I wanted to see when the best light was and what the good angles were. I decided that first light with the sun just hitting the house was when I wanted to first go over. I spent about an hour taking photographs but by 9:30 in the morning, the sun was already too high in the sky. I took a few wide shots that showed the landscape and they choose one of these early in the morning photographs. I also wanted to show the personality of the individual flowers. I created several closer up photographs, but the light wasn’t interesting for closeups on that first day. I went back a couple days later on a cloudy day. Clouds act like a large soft light source which render the flowers in fine detail. I created a series of panorama closeups by taking two horizontal photographs pivoted from the same point. Meaning I knew that these photographs would have to be stitched together in PhotoShop. They choose one of these two image panoramas for their second photograph to frame. I spent time working with the photograph of the house to create the morning light. I wanted the warm glow of the early morning lights. I also helped what mother nature hadn’t done by filling in a couple light flower spots. Every year there are a few spots that don’t flower and with a little PhotoShop help I was able to fill in those light spots. PhotoShop does a good job stitching photographs together, it actually does an amazing job, but there are always areas of the photograph that I have to manually create to make the photograph work. I won’t tell you what parts I put together myself, but the finished photograph turned out just the way I wanted. This was a very nice spring project. Especially this year with our stay at home, social distancing that we all have had to do.