Excellent week of growth, this week I mixed in a coconut water / aloe mixture + a secret ingredient and it has really helped turned this lady into a stunner. Big fat gains this week! I’ve captured some excellent photos that I’ll be sure to attach in a later post after editing, this plant is absolute🔥: It might be the most stunningly beautiful strain I’ve ever personally grown. Enjoy the pics and I hope y’all have a great week of growth! See ya next week ☀️💪🏻🔥🌱
Wow beautiful. I am new here. Previously a profesh-photographer. Curious what you used to take your trichome photographs. I have this cheap microscope I picked up but not impressed. I would love to have the clarity you have in these photos. If you don't mind? Those images are wonderful as are all the others too. You have the hang of it I'd say. LOL.
@Aromagurl, I’m happy to offer some suggestions that were helpful to me when using the microscope. First, I find it best to get the microscope in a position that is comfortable to hold and visualize its movements. Next tip I’d offer is that you can cut off a few small leaf tips and place them under the microscope, this way you can really zoom in and focus on the trichomes. Lastly is I always use extra light above and beyond the little led’s inside the microscope, I find the excess light really helps make the images pop. Good luck, hopefully the tips are helpful!
@Flywalka, I would really appreciate any advice that you have yes and THANK YOU. This is just a media I am not familiar with and feel so out of my element when working so "close-up". LOL. Fire away! haha.
@Aromagurl, I was able to have a look at the microscope that you shared and to be honest, it’s very similar to the model I am using. I am more than happy to offer some suggestions for capturing images with the microscope that will help improve quality, if that’s something your interested in?
@cheekiestsauce, hey! Sorry for the super late reply, I haven’t checked my diary in forever. To answer your question, in this specific grow I used a FF ocean forest as the base soil cut with roughly 30% worm castings and 20% perlite.