Buttercup in all its’ Glory 1
These are wonderful in the swathes of uncountable numbers you can often see these in but every now and then you get a single one that stands out in the shade somewhere and on a still enough day you can get a shot of one that isn’t moving. (yes, I know you can use a fast speed and high ISO and a larger f-number to freeze it in any movement but when you do that you lose some of the back to front detail data and there is a definite difference between the way hues record themselves on the chip when you use long shutter speeds and max depth of field – as well as the light value you give the chip between 5560 and 3320 {daylight to incandescent} so, if you’ll allow it, trying for a still breezeless day is, in my experience, the only way to get what you see here - in quite this way : try it why dontcha ! - f32 @ ISO 100 at 1.3sec - you might have to go slower or a little bit faster on the speed depending on the depth of the shade and, mind the breeze as well as play around with whether or not you give it pure white light at 5560 or go a little less or more than that to warm it up or cool it down a bit {depending on the hues in the shade} ! - and don’t leave out the NDF nor the circular polarizer.
If confused now, see my data on shooting techniques and hopefully that will help)