• Members 1782 posts
    March 1, 2025, 3:58 a.m.

    I'm afraid these aren't pressing my buttons.
    1. Doesn't have enough details or distinctive enough forms within the dark area to start to register with me.
    2. Is more interesting because of your story and the "open mouth" shape. Getting an exposure at 1/10 at the moment of a lightning flash (ie., it wasn't a time exposure) is quite rare. The foregound areas are lit up but I can't see anything there that gets my attention.
    Storm shooting with lightning is like that. I've wasted far far more pixels and silver grains trying to get shots in conditions like this than I care to think about. My successes have been very very rare.

  • Members 1782 posts
    March 1, 2025, 4:09 a.m.

    As always, there are multiple ways to do things. In a situation like this, I'm pretty sure I'd have tried something like Fireplace did with his thistle shot this week.
    I'd have tried to get the dark, mossy wall completely behind the side sunlit blooms. To do it, I'd have kept the camera low and moved around more to the right.
    The Photoshop generative remove and fill did a great job though.

  • Members 20 posts
    March 1, 2025, 1:46 p.m.

    I really love the colours in this. The low contrast greys and browns in the foreground juxtaposed with the bright bright sunlit green in the distance and the specs of white from the houses. Really pulls your focus in. I also enjoy how the coastline both offers depth of field and leads your eyes to the star of the show. The grassy planes.

  • Members 790 posts
    March 1, 2025, 2:29 p.m.

    The Myth of Narcissus

    The banks of our local burn have scattered patches of native wild daffodils, Narcissus pseudonarcissus. These ones seemed to be admiring their own reflection.

    Dydd Gŵyl Dewi Hapus 😊

    P3221369.jpg

    P3221369.jpg

    JPG, 4.8 MB, uploaded by Woodsider79 on March 1, 2025.

  • Members 790 posts
    March 1, 2025, 6:13 p.m.

    I think I prefer the second shot. The first is a great illustration of a great hike, but just seems to present itself too easily. The blue of the sky feels a bit cool too. The second has a more interesting atmosphere - hope you packed your waterproofs! The contrast between the sunlit thistles and the moody background is just right. Arvo's crop (above) helps I think.

  • Members 790 posts
    March 1, 2025, 6:16 p.m.

    Not sure about this one. There's a nice diagonal leading line, leading...out of frame. I think in that situation I would have zoomed/cropped in to the central portion of trees and their reflections.

  • Members 790 posts
    March 1, 2025, 6:19 p.m.

    This has captured nicely the windblown late winter sunshine on the moors. I think I would have framed it with the tree to the left or right.

  • Members 790 posts
    March 1, 2025, 6:27 p.m.

    I like this a lot. Interesting subtle colours in the rocks and water, nice composition drawing us in towards the sunlit cove. It struck me that it could be in south-west scotland - almost as if the Atlantic never opened 😁

  • Members 1166 posts
    March 1, 2025, 7:34 p.m.

    Spring hasn't really started here in Austria yet, this photo makes me want it to start here soon!
    Nice bright feeling with a good close up of the snow bells on a sunny day

    I like this one. The colours and contrast are good. the details in the green hill are good and the clouds are nice touch. The blue lake has a calming effect on me.

    This is good, the central placing of the tree has some merit, but I think the image would be improved by cropping some from the right and the bottom, so the tree is now somewhat off centre and "looking" into the nice space on the left. The format would also become a bit more panoramic.

  • Members 1166 posts
    March 1, 2025, 7:41 p.m.

    Thanks Arvo
    The crop does work; the blue comes out better,
    but I think I like the spikey nature of the leaves in the original too:-)

  • Members 1166 posts
    March 1, 2025, 7:49 p.m.

    Woodsider mentioned that this looks like it could have been taken in Scotland. That was my first thought too, before I read your title.
    Super composition!
    The way that the light is shining brightly on that little group of houses really highlights them in the image. The whole bay seems to work like a frame for the little village. Nice broody sky too.
    The rocks, pebbles and the water are all bright enough to see their details, but also dark enough to offer a nice contrast to the lit up houses.

  • Members 1166 posts
    March 1, 2025, 7:51 p.m.

    Another good snowy scene from Lapland I presume?
    Trees, standing there all covered in snow, do tend to remind me of various characters too

  • Members 1166 posts
    March 1, 2025, 8:04 p.m.

    It looks like a nice lush green summer meadow, a gentle hill with paths to walk up and explore various angles and view points.
    Do you have the "right to roam" in Estonia? In Austria you can walk in nature almost everywhere in the countryside, following sensible guidelines and being generally respectful to the land and wildlife. I think it is pretty much the same in Scotland too.
    Looking at this shot, I wonder if there were also other opportunities, where that curvy road could be snaking its way through the lush landscape ?

  • March 1, 2025, 8:25 p.m.

    Sure. There are some private properties, where it is not possible - but otherwise you can go everywhere.

    Looking at this shot, I wonder if there were also other opportunities, where that curvy road could be snaking its way through the lush landscape ?

    Actually it was not photo outing, there was some event in nearby cofe and I just happened to have my camera on hand; this shot was taken from balcony - not much room to find better viewpoint.
    For the next week I try to find some better views from nearby places. I'm more interested in details and small objects, thereby not the easy task :)

  • Members 1166 posts
    March 1, 2025, 8:27 p.m.

    yes, those wild daffodils can be so vain :-)
    It's a nice little intimate "landscape within" that you have found here :-)
    By the way, I received the book I ordered from David Ward today, It looks good, I'll start to read it soon. Thanks for the suggestion!

    ( Book:"Landscape Within; Insights and Inspiration for Photographers" by David Ward)

  • Members 420 posts
    March 1, 2025, 10:13 p.m.

    The Rolling Hills

    farm 1.jpg

    farm 1.jpg

    JPG, 3.7 MB, uploaded by tprevatt on March 1, 2025.

  • Members 1166 posts
    March 3, 2025, 3:38 p.m.

    That's an interesting shot of a peaceful country scene. Sort of looks like the front of the "hut" is a folly. Is it perhaps a gate of some sorts along a path?
    If it were a digital photo, one might also think that the rest of the hut has been cloned out for fun :-)

    As usual from you, nice contrast & tonailty!

  • Members 420 posts
    March 3, 2025, 9:15 p.m.

    in 1984 took I took a trip back the where I grew up. This was from my grandparents ranch I used to roam as until I went away to college. It is October so the grasses are in their fall colors. The trees had just started to change. The technical details, a 4x5 field camera on TriX developed in HC110 Solution B. This particular tract was rotated between hay and pasture for the cattle when I was a kid. The hut was used to store feed and hay which we used in the winter. We also kept things we used in working cattle in out buildings like this we had at multiple location on the ranch. By 1984, most of the herd had been sold off as ranchers were transforming their land to grow row crops as the cattle prices had crashed related to changes made to the soil bank program by the US Government. This tract of land at the time of this image was used for hay only. I have always been drawn to this image - it brings back such fond memories of simpler days with me on my horse galloping across the country side. We were either working cattle or going fox hunting with my grandfather and our neighbors.