Alone and yet perfect - this single pasque flower (Pulsatilla vulgaris) stands in quiet dignity on a sunny dry meadow. Its violet calyx is wide open, as if stretching towards the light. The velvety surface of the petals catches the glow of the afternoon sun, while the finely hairy stems and bracts glow silvery. This single shot sets the plant apart from its surroundings and allows an intimate encounter with one of Central Europe's most beautiful spring botanicals.
The background is softly blurred and bathed in warm brown tones, allowing the luminous flower to stand out clearly. Its shape is perfectly symmetrical, its centre filled with fine yellow stamens - a contrast that lends the picture both calm and visual tension. It is a quiet moment, captured in the interplay of light, structure and colour.
The pasqueflower is a protected wild plant that only grows on calcareous, poor meadows in Central Europe. It flowers early in the year, often as early as March, when the nights are still frosty. Its dense hairs protect it from the cold - and at the same time give it a distinctive appearance. It is a favourite subject for nature photography as it is both botanically interesting and visually appealing.
This photograph shows the plant not in context, but in portrait - a deliberately reduced but powerful view of the individual. It symbolises gentleness, resilience and the quiet presence of spring. As a mural, this motif is particularly suitable in portrait format - for rooms where concentration, tranquillity or closeness to nature are required: Practices, therapy rooms, living areas, yoga studios or nature museums.
I have always enjoyed photography. Even when I was young, I took photos with the Beirette. It even happened to me once that I inserted a film twice ... and the photos I took were very interesting.
I then bought my digital SLR camera in 2014. The first photos..
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