Shooting elderberries in bloom was so rewarding (and instructive) that I eagerly looked forward to spending more time with them when their berries formed. All the lessons learned from my first go-‘round still applied at this stage in the elderberry lifecycle – yep, elderberry branches still strenuously object to being cut from their mother shrub, so I had to work fast. And this lovely shrub is still totally worth it.
The berries start out green before ripening to a nearly-black plum purple, and the stems that anchor the berries turn the vibrant fuchsia you sometimes see in Swiss chard ribs – a really striking combination! I had no problem finding berry bunches in both stages of ripeness. The leaves were another story. Sad to say, the foliage had had a rough time of it in the six weeks since I had shot the blossoms. Clearly some bugs had been very well fed by the shrub’s formerly elegant leaves. It’s a shame, but the berries were really the star of the show.
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So into the studio we went (several times, due to “rapid elderberry collapse syndrome”), and here’s the payoff. Hands down, elderberry is my favorite plant from this photo series – between the lovely, refined blossoms and the dramatic berries, this is just one beautiful shrub. I’m already brainstorming ways to shoot it differently in 2020!
Elderberry, Sambucus
Shoot date: August 11, 2019
Possible use as a cut flower: Ever hopeful, I tried again and put a cutting in a vase on my kitchen table. Still nope. Sigh.