dcschooley said:You need more space between the sun and the tree. The tree is almost on top of the setting sun, so with the open space to the left, they end up looking scrunched together. The camera needs to be moved to the left if possible. A bit of cropping from the left might be needed, but not until the tree and sun are in the right place. I like the diagonal shoreline. You could bring the shadows on the shore up a bit in post processing, but just enough to get a bit of texture, so don't overdo it.
jondave said:I agree to what's been previously mentioned, but more than anything else straighten your horizon in camera. You can do it in post but you'll be cropping precious pixels.
dcschooley said:You need more space between the sun and the tree. The tree is almost on top of the setting sun, so with the open space to the left, they end up looking scrunched together. The camera needs to be moved to the left if possible. A bit of cropping from the left might be needed, but not until the tree and sun are in the right place. I like the diagonal shoreline. You could bring the shadows on the shore up a bit in post processing, but just enough to get a bit of texture, so don't overdo it.
brad-man said:jondave said:I agree to what's been previously mentioned, but more than anything else straighten your horizon in camera. You can do it in post but you'll be cropping precious pixels.
What are you basing this observation on? The lake is irregularly shaped and the terrain is hilly. The high tension towers are vertical and that's good enough for me.
Nice shot JR.
J.R. said:Hi,
I've only recently engaged in landscape photography and clicked this recently. I need advice as to how I could have made this shot better, in camera or in PP.
Thanks in advance!
J.R.
paul13walnut5 said:Getting in cliser and zooming out would have given you much more flexibility with perspective, you could maybe even used the tree as a framing device up the right edge, with the slightest slither of black shore forming the lower edge.
Taken from eye height? Lower height would perhaps work better, imho.
Make more of a feature of the water.
I would maybe also have waited 2 minutes to see what the sky did, it's a clear night, so maybe some magic hour crazy colours would have given the sky more interest, quite often just as the sun has dipped, but to my mind you had a good 20 mins shooting ahead of you.
Theres no realfocus point or lead in, to me its a record shot, even something like going much farther back and making the tree the feature, zooming in so that the crunched branches contradt against the colours of the sky, even to the poing of the heart of the branches filling the frame so that theres not any space around the tree at all,.
It's not the best sky, nor at the optimal time, and I think there was a lot more effect could have been had from perspective. In a stunning view you want to capture it the way you saw it, with a view like this, you need to manage the scene better to let the best image out.
Sorry if this sounds harsh, Just an opinion.
Northstar said:J.R. said:Hi,
I've only recently engaged in landscape photography and clicked this recently. I need advice as to how I could have made this shot better, in camera or in PP.
Thanks in advance!
J.R.
Jr....I like the shot as is...a little more space between sun and tree by moving to your left a little would've been better...everything else looks good to me
infared said:Introduce yourself to the Rule of Thirds
http://www.cambridgeincolour.com/tutorials/rule-of-thirds.htm
CarlTN said:I agree with all the above points. However, there is an element of subjectivity here as well. Art is subjective.
I would have had the tree toward the right side and sun toward the left, and I would have tried to recover some shadow detail. But then, that's how I usually like it. I don't like too much of a picture to be black or close to black. Many other photogs tend to love a lot of black because it creates drama. I say that's fine for portraits of people...but in landscape, not so much. Just my opinion.
There is too much area of your shot taken up by a sky that is too featureless for my taste. I would either add some subtle cloud elements from another shot, or else crop the shot to a wider aspect, to limit the sky area.
The rule of thirds is probably the most important compositional rule in photography, in my opinion...but there are many others. It's not always easy to decide which to employ. The other rules of composition, are also sometimes more subtle to spot.
I guess my main complaint is you didn't shoot several shots with slightly different composition, then ask which of those worked best.
Not every picture has to be the best it can be, just to justify its existence. I've shot over 30,000 pictures in the last 4.5 years, over 5 camera bodies (several were compacts). Even though 98% of those aren't worth exhibiting somewhere, I am still keeping the files. Many of them were also taken to record something, not just to attempt to get a nice picture. (And no, I'm not saying the opposite was stated in this thread...I'm just spouting off.)
Last but not least...don't get caught up in thinking a landscape picture always has to be done at wide angle. Many of my own personal favorites that I have done, were done with a fast telephoto, zeroing in on a subject...such as a tree, or even smaller elements.
The only time my work was published, last year, the shot was done at an equivalent focal length of 28mm, but it was cropped a bit. It was also a vertical, or "portrait mode". The final crop, I believe was more like what a 37 to 40mm angle of view would be (full frame...this was a crop camera though).
Most difficult of all, and also what I keep trying to do, is create a landscape shot that includes wildlife. Again, seldom am I able to do this with a wide angle lens.