Portrait of a Finch

My poetry professor would be proud of this haiku I wrote…

solitary finch
perched deep in the mulberry
will you stay or go?
By Princess Rosebud

This morning, I looked up into the branches of a winter-nude mulberry and couldn’t resist snapping a photo of this precious little finch.

I had to run to retrieve my phone as I willed her to stay long enough for a photo op. “Please don’t move, please don’t move, please don’t go.”

And she didn’t.

I was rewarded with a mostly monochromatic composition, which is exactly what I’d hoped for. In reality, the little bird has a yellow breast, but the quality of light turned everything almost colorless and dramatic.

8 thoughts on “Portrait of a Finch

  1. It’s the backlighting. When the available light comes from behind the subject, you get everything from a silhouette to what you got, a slightly faded, almost black & white photo. If you shoot from the shadows into brighter light, the trees around you will form a black frame. You can do some interesting stuff using light and shadow.

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