Drawing, painting and
photographing fungi |
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Here's a special treat - well , two actually! In the first,
the botanical artist Lorna Minton gives you a complete
eight-part course on sketching and painting fungi, and in the
second, wildlife photographer Gordon Dickson offers an
eight-part master class in fungal photography (and a few other
people help with advice on related topics).
Copy freely for the classroom
In this series of
eight Mycologist articles, Lorna Minton shows you
how to sketch and paint fungi.
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Illustrating fungi part 1
Illustrating fungi part 2
Painting fungi with gouache. Part 1
Painting fungi with gouache. Part 2
Equipment needed for painting fungi
Sketching in the field
Backgrounds for paintings
Pen and ink with watercolour
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These are the
formal references for the articles available in this
section:
Minton, L.
(1989). Illustrating fungi. 1. Mycologist 3:
114-115
Minton, L.
(1989). Illustrating fungi. 2. Mycologist 3:
181-182
Minton, L.
(1990). Illustrating fungi. 3. Painting fungi with
gouache. Part 1. Mycologist 4: 14-15
Minton, L.
(1990). Illustrating fungi. 4. Painting fungi with
gouache. Part 2. Mycologist 4: 74-75
Minton, L.
(1990). Illustrating fungi. 5. Equipment needed for
painting fungi. Mycologist 4: 138-139
Minton, L.
(1990). Illustrating fungi. 6. Sketching in the field.
Mycologist 4: 182-183
Minton, L.
(1991). Illustrating fungi. 7. Backgrounds for
paintings. Mycologist 5: 38-39
Minton, L.
(1991). Illustrating fungi. 8. Pen and ink with
watercolour. Mycologist 5: 90-91
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Lorna Minton is a
Gold-medal-winning botanical artist.
CLICK HERE to visit her own website to learn more.
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Gordon
Dickson's series of articles deals with the basics of
good photography. We have also added some other, later,
articles that expand the photographic theme.
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Intentions, aims and viewpoints
Camera, lights, action!
Composition and exposure
Some examples in colour
Problems with colours
Studio photography
Photomicrography
Photography through the microscope for absolute
beginners
Choosing and using equipment
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These are the
formal references for the articles available in this
section:
Dickson, G.
(1987). Photographing fungi. 1. Mycologist 1:
76-77
Dickson, G.
(1987). Photographing fungi. 2. Mycologist 1:
124-125
Dickson, G.
(1987). Photographing fungi. 3. Mycologist 1:
176-177
Dickson, G.
(1988). Photographing fungi. 4. Mycologist 2:
26-28
Dickson, G.
(1988). Photographing fungi. 5. Mycologist 2:
71-72
Dickson, G.
(1988). Photographing fungi. 6. Mycologist 2:
174-175
Dickson, G.
(1989). Photographing fungi. 7. Mycologist 3:
37-38
Braddock, A.
(2000). Photography through the microscope. A guide for
absolute beginners. Field Mycology 1: 7-8
Dickson, G.
(1989). Photographing fungi. 8. Mycologist 3:
84-85
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Further articles about photography of fungi are
available here as follows:
Smart, R.G., Seviour, R.J. & Pethica, L.M. (1989). A
modified camera tripod suitable for photographing fungi
at ground level. Mycologist 3: 147-149
CLICK HERE
to download the complete text.
And did you know that you can take high quality
close-up "photographs" with your flat-bed
scanner? Well, here's
how:
Evans, S. (1996). Electronic fungi - a virtual
possibility. Mycologist 10: 8-10.
CLICK HERE
to download the complete text.
Greenhalgh, P.M. (2002). Scanopics. Taking
photographs with a flat-bed scanner. Field Mycology
3: 6-8.
CLICK HERE
to download the complete text.
The best source of photographic images used to be
located
at www.rogersmushrooms.com which was based on the most commonly-used field guide
(Roger Phillips' Mushrooms and other fungi of Great
Britain and Europe). Although the book is still
available (view
on Amazon), the website disappeared in 2017.
Alan Wood has written a page about this on his
Weekendgardener.net website, in which he suggests some
alternatives for mushroom collectors (view
this page now).
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Fungi for Schools - an integrated
collection of teaching resources © British Mycological Society 2006
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