Bill Graham
New member
As an old woodbutcher, I'm fascinated with trees in general, especially when considering the conditions they endure to survive and grow. Last year I encountered these two at the Snake River Overlook at Grand Teton National Park:
"Tree, Snake River"
Nikon D200, 17-35 AF-S @ 22mm, 1/30@F11, ISO 100
Lighting was not excellent(to put it mildly), taken late in the morning on a bluebird sky day. In color, it made a nice postcard photo, but a friend suggested I should try a black and white version. This is the result. There is a very slight crop at the left and bottom, I kept the original aspect ratio and just eliminated a little grass in the foreground and some empty sky on the left.
The contrasts in the scene were what caught my eye: old and new, leaning and upright, and the transitions from new grass to the plains to the mountains to the big Wyoming sky.
Your thoughts and critique are welcome. Feel free to edit and repost.
TIA,
Bill
"Tree, Snake River"
Nikon D200, 17-35 AF-S @ 22mm, 1/30@F11, ISO 100
Lighting was not excellent(to put it mildly), taken late in the morning on a bluebird sky day. In color, it made a nice postcard photo, but a friend suggested I should try a black and white version. This is the result. There is a very slight crop at the left and bottom, I kept the original aspect ratio and just eliminated a little grass in the foreground and some empty sky on the left.
The contrasts in the scene were what caught my eye: old and new, leaning and upright, and the transitions from new grass to the plains to the mountains to the big Wyoming sky.
Your thoughts and critique are welcome. Feel free to edit and repost.
TIA,
Bill