You've said it yourself: the combination of warm, idyllic autumn colours in the foreground with the cold and harsh snow and rock of a background winter landscape, is what makes these shots (all of them) stand out.
Every one of them has something (different) going for it.
The first is the widest view with the most impressive mountain range in the back, but the foreground is more uniform and less autumny.
(There are autumn trees but they are in the shadow part on the image; the sunny side is all meadow.)
The second is probably my favourite, because of the harmoniously sloping curves of both foliage and rock.
I always find it hard to resist diagonals.
The third has an unusual "bowl shape" and shows the waterfall best.
(Someone in this thread concentrated on that last image and cropped it, removing most of the trees, and that, for me, is a shame: I like how the trees are well proportioned vis-à-vis the rocks in the original presentation above.)
There's a lot of optical illusion at play here. The building opposite the one we are facing, is reflected in a diffracted way, like it has fallen, broken apart, picked up and glued back together. The (mostly) red and the red&white flags, flying half mast for some reason unknown, are not reflected, but because of the wind playing with them, they are partly folded, not straight in a strong gale, and that also creates an illusion of being garbled.
The red stands out nicely against the white and black and would have been lost in a totally blue reflection.
I like all of that. (And I want to know more about about those flags: this must be someplace in the commonwealth because that is a union jack in the corner of the red flag.
The other one could be a lot of things : red and white is very popular as combination.
And why is it flying half mast?)
Those colours are surreal.
They enhance the feeling that this is scene from a Wes Anderson movie or something that Martin Parr (the Magnum photographer) would photograph.
The image was made in 2012 on a Nikon D800E "full frame" camera. A camera of modest specs now but brand-new and state of the art then. I was using a very old Nikkor 200mm f/4 "film lens" on a tripod, 1/30, f/8. I was amazed at the performance of that lens on a digital camera, a lens I had owned since it, too was state of the art some time in the 1970s.
Focus was manual only and I was doing my best to focus "at infinity" - the most distant leaves - not the lens' hard stop of the focus barrel. So some of the grasses at the very bottom of the frame, closer to the camera, are OOF. But to claim that I could have selectively focused on either would be a lie. The focus movement was smooth but critical focus was just a lucky micro-twitch either way. The trees were almost 1/4 mile away.
Here's the full image from which I "artfully" cropped the final masterpiece.
I'm viewing on a Retina 5K monitor, also. iMac 27.
My settings are ok. I'm, using Safari. I get randomly different resolutions from the site after clicking on the screen image depending on when I log in.
Since I know how to get the "correct" image if I want to, I'm not motivated to try to figure out why the site sends me randomly different resolutions from time to time. I think it's probably due to the phase of the moon.
That was me 😀 and I explained why the cropped version works better for me.
As minniev correctly stated, there is no right or wrong or good or bad there. Everyone sees images differently and what works for one will not always work for everyone else.
Fascinating. I always enjoy getting insights into the decision-making of the photographer.
I think I might have made a very similar crop.
Seen like this, the progression of focus from bottom up is clear.
I hadn't appreciated the dark trunk just left of the centre until I saw the original.
Unfortunately I was not able to obtain the info from office mgmt source as to why they were flying half mast ( there was no national or regional cause). I will keep digging.
Location is Toronto, Ontario, Canada - former colony of British Empire...
Actually got out of the house and took a couple of photos. Went to Blair Castle Estate to see the beech trees before Storm Ashley stripped the last leaves of the trees.
These two I liked. As before I have no issue with others editing and re-posting within this thread.
Ah, but somehow when I was looking at the "stability" of another photo at full monitor brightness I forgot to turn it back down to "calibrated". They still work when you click on the wee links at the bottom, but redid them so they are better agsinst the white.
Glad they stir a memory!
Thank you.
Nicely seen, I'd not looked at it quite that way but you're right. I generally "go for the logic" and end up looking at the edges of the frame making sure I incorporate the ends of the subject to "complete the view". But so often I find that the resulting frame lacks "balance", so now also always look just at the centre and "go with the gut". Same here, the ones that included the "front of the wave" on the left lack the overall balance when viewed at home, the one from the gut feeling is the one you see.