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06-05-2007, 06:16 PM
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Join Date: Sep 2006
Zone: 5a
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Dendrobium aberrans
Hate to say it folks, but I have been successful with two Dendrobiums (after killing off many.) The first is superbum (anosmum) and now this one - aberrans. Since I just love minis, this was a natural and I have three plants of this little guy.
The pot in this picture is 2" wide. Sorry for the "blown out" whites, but this little guy is really tough to photograph. Yes, that's another spike on the left. I understand these guys are in pretty-much constant bloom like Haraella's.
Last edited by Ross; 01-24-2008 at 05:56 PM..
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06-05-2007, 07:41 PM
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Is this any better for the blossom?
Last edited by Ross; 01-24-2008 at 05:56 PM..
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06-05-2007, 07:55 PM
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Join Date: Apr 2006
Zone: 9a
Location: Spring Hill, FL
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Ross, aberrans is one of my absolute favorites! Thanks for sharing
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06-05-2007, 08:10 PM
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Am I off-the-hook as "Dendrobium Killer?"
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06-05-2007, 09:16 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Apr 2006
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Location: Spring Hill, FL
Posts: 17,222
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I've told you all along that you could do it!
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06-05-2007, 11:21 PM
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Join Date: Apr 2007
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Location: Long Island, NY
Age: 63
Posts: 7,321
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Go Ross Go Ross!
Cute little plant ..
What is your medium and the magic behind it's survival?
I could use a little advice for my dend. laevifolium.
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06-06-2007, 02:27 AM
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Join Date: Jul 2006
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Location: Finland
Age: 58
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Very nice Ross
This is my favorite Dendrobium too and now I've got two of them already. First one is growing something in middle of the leaves ???
The flower is cute.
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06-06-2007, 02:34 AM
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Join Date: Feb 2007
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Location: California
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Woooohooooo!!!!! Congrats on growing the Den's! The flowers are soo pretty! Way to go Ross!
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06-06-2007, 09:11 AM
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Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: San Antonio, TX
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Ross, great plant. If you have photoshop cs2 or cs3, you can fix "blown out whites" in about two seconds using the shadows/highlights command in the image/adjustments menu. (for safety, use a duplicate layer so that you don't accidentally destroy your image)
the settings I use are tonal width 20, radius 30 pixels, and color correction +20, midtone contrast 0, black clip 0.01, white clip 0.01.
the strength of the effect I titrate to how much tweaking is needed. but in essence, by increasing the strength of the "shadows" slider, you're lightening dark areas, and by increasing the strength of the "highlights" slider you're darkening bright areas. so increasing the shadows slider is good for when you have details lost in puddles of black, but the highlights slider is good for when you blow out the whites. it leaves the midtones alone.
of course, you could get the same effect using the curves command, but I think it's a little harder.
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06-06-2007, 09:19 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ScottMcC
Ross, great plant. If you have photoshop cs2 or cs3, you can fix "blown out whites" in about two seconds using the shadows/highlights command in the image/adjustments menu. (for safety, use a duplicate layer so that you don't accidentally destroy your image)
the settings I use are tonal width 20, radius 30 pixels, and color correction +20, midtone contrast 0, black clip 0.01, white clip 0.01.
the strength of the effect I titrate to how much tweaking is needed. but in essence, by increasing the strength of the "shadows" slider, you're lightening dark areas, and by increasing the strength of the "highlights" slider you're darkening bright areas. so increasing the shadows slider is good for when you have details lost in puddles of black, but the highlights slider is good for when you blow out the whites. it leaves the midtones alone.
of course, you could get the same effect using the curves command, but I think it's a little harder.
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Thanks Scott, I'll try that later today.
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