Seeing – Hidden Beauty

Analogous to the way in which you can train your eye to see nature in new and different ways while out hiking through a forrest, birefringent crystals hold within themselves an inherent beauty which is not difficult to see once you learn how to look.  It is quite amazing how dramatically the appearance of a simple sugar crystal changes when viewed through crossed polarizers as the following before and after images illustrate.  Each pair of photographs are of the exact same part of a sugar crystal taken through a microscope with a magnification of about 50x.  The only difference is that the before photos are taken with unpolarized light while the after images are taken with the addition of a pair of polarizers.  The colors which appear in the cross polarized images are all produced by nature, they are not computer generated nor are have they been enhanced, you would see these same colors if you looked through the microscope eye piece with your eye instead of the camera.  There is an incredible amount of beauty in nature, but often we need to learn how to see in order to observe it.

As with all of the images on my site you can click on them to see them full size.

If you are wondering what cross polarization microphotography is, this post is my attempt to describe how these images are created.

Seeing – Learning to See Differently

It was a hike on the Tolleston Dunes trail in the Indiana Dunes National Park which sparked a different way of Seeing nature for me.  My wife loves wildflowers and has always enjoyed spotting and identifying them, while hiking this trail together I first began to really pay attention to the details and the little things alongside the trail.

First I noticed this Chicken of the Woods fungi. True, being bright orange and yellow, and sitting in the middle of the trail it was hard to miss.  But it was really cool and I was captivated by the colors and shapes.  

As we continued down the trail I was more focused on scanning the ground and foliage alongside the trail, and I started noticing more subtle things like a frog resting in a leaf.

Or a spider having lunch.

Or a spiny mushroom.

Once you start noticing these little things, these small details, you really cannot not notice them anymore.  Things that previously your brain would have ignored, begin to stand out.  A little flash of color, a shape, or a bit of contrast.  Little things start catching your attention, making you stop to take a closer look.  The brain is learning to see the natural world in a different way.  The change is subtle at first, but it builds over time to the point where you can barely walk 50′ down a trail without spotting something that makes you stop to investigate.

As a result I can now hike the same trail dozens of times and never run out of new, beautiful and fascinating things to see, and of course photograph.

Other Posts in this Series


Seeing – What Do You See

Seeing – Learning To See Differently