What kind of camera do you have? Does it have manual capabilities?
If you want quality close-ups, you may need a macro lens, which can be purchased for any slr camera.
White balance and composition are two things you need to work with when shooting flowers. Also, never use a flash. Mount your camera on a tripod if you can. Does your camera have a manual focus? Don't zoom, if possible. Zooms often degrade the quality of the photo. You may need to select your flower carefully - don't pick one growing amongst a ton of things with the garden hose and the blurred tail of a dog in the background... i.e. composition is really important. Try to find a flower that has a simple background (sky, grass, other flowers) and see if you can blur it by focusing just on the flower you're shooting.
If you want quality close-ups, you may need a macro lens, which can be purchased for any slr camera.
White balance and composition are two things you need to work with when shooting flowers. Also, never use a flash. Mount your camera on a tripod if you can. Does your camera have a manual focus? Don't zoom, if possible. Zooms often degrade the quality of the photo. You may need to select your flower carefully - don't pick one growing amongst a ton of things with the garden hose and the blurred tail of a dog in the background... i.e. composition is really important. Try to find a flower that has a simple background (sky, grass, other flowers) and see if you can blur it by focusing just on the flower you're shooting.