Detailed macro shot of white Euphorbia marginata flowers featuring distinctive green stripes on the bracts. Bright natural sunlight highlights the delicate texture and botanical details of this summer garden plant.
Tags:
PHOTO INFO
- Image Size
- 2448x3264px
- File Size
- 729.71KB
- resolution
- 2K
- License
- Commercial use free
- Aesthetic Score
- 76/100
VISUAL ATTRIBUTES OF THIS STOCK PHOTO
- Color temperature
- neutral
- Brightness
- high_key
- Saturation
- moderate
- Lighting Source
- natural
- Lighting Condition
- midday
- Negative Space
- none
- Negative Space Location
- none
- Depth Of Field
- medium
- Has People
- none
- Season
- summer
- Time Of Day
- afternoon
- Shot Scale
- close_up
- Background Type
- natural_scene
- Orientation
- vertical
- Composition Style
- close_uppattern
- Dominant colors
- whitegreen
- Palette Style
- naturallight_airy
- Mood
- serenenatural
- Style
- botanicalnature
- Subject type
- flowerplant
aesthetic analysis & score
This is a high-quality botanical capture that excels in color harmony and natural lighting, offering a fresh and detailed view of the snow-on-the-mountain flower.
Composition & Framing
75The tight framing fills the canvas with the floral subject, creating an immersive texture, though the lack of a single focal point makes it slightly busy.
Lighting & exposure
82Bright, natural sunlight illuminates the white bracts effectively, creating crisp highlights and deep shadows that add dimension.
Color harmony & palette
85The high-contrast combination of pure white bracts with green stripes against dark green foliage creates a fresh, natural, and visually pleasing palette.
Visual impact & mood
78The image conveys a fresh, organic, and serene mood typical of summer garden photography, appealing to nature enthusiasts.
Technical Quality & Clarity
80The image is sharp in the central areas, capturing fine details of the flower structures, with a natural depth of field blurring the background.
Subject clarity & focal hierarchy
72While the subject is clearly the flowers, the repetitive pattern of multiple blooms creates a textured field rather than a distinct focal hierarchy.