What a great way to start your morning.Not being good at early starts these days I am envious. Great shot. The only minor picky thing I would notice would be that the trees on each side are a fraction cut off but you don't really notice that with the dominant tree in the middle. Very good.
Images like this are stronger if you have a clear separation between the trees. If you don't, you need either the trees to have a certain pattern, like rows of trees or a triangle to suggest depth, either to have so much repetition it forms a whole, a texture. The difficulty is for the image to look coherent, and not messy. You can have a look at Simon Baxter's channel here : https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCcGPU4A6xJ1OYOkvfMoo25w he's specialised in woodland photography.
Lol thanks Nick. Good input. I already am a huge Simon Baxter fan. Just starting to really learn... with this patch of trees i did not have any separation from another patch on the left hence the cropping to the edges. I love viewing the smaller hazy trees in the back here that are engulfed in the fog, just wished there were more.
What a great way to start your morning.Not being good at early starts these days I am envious. Great shot. The only minor picky thing I would notice would be that the trees on each side are a fraction cut off but you don't really notice that with the dominant tree in the middle. Very good.
Thank you, it was fun
Images like this are stronger if you have a clear separation between the trees. If you don't, you need either the trees to have a certain pattern, like rows of trees or a triangle to suggest depth, either to have so much repetition it forms a whole, a texture. The difficulty is for the image to look coherent, and not messy. You can have a look at Simon Baxter's channel here : https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCcGPU4A6xJ1OYOkvfMoo25w he's specialised in woodland photography.
Lol thanks Nick. Good input. I already am a huge Simon Baxter fan. Just starting to really learn... with this patch of trees i did not have any separation from another patch on the left hence the cropping to the edges. I love viewing the smaller hazy trees in the back here that are engulfed in the fog, just wished there were more.