Three different days, different places.
In the middle image, I tried from my hotel balcony to grab the fog that was a line in a depression in the hills of northern New Jersey. New Jersey does not have real mountains, so I can't call it mountain fog.
The last two are 24 hours apart, plus or minus a couple of minutes.
Mac
Loc: Pittsburgh, Philadelphia now Hernando Co. Fl.
daldds wrote:
Three different days, different places.
In the middle image, I tried from my hotel balcony to grab the fog that was a line in a depression in the hills of northern New Jersey. New Jersey does not have real mountains, so I can't call it mountain fog.
The last two are 24 hours apart, plus or minus a couple of minutes.
Nice set.
I especially like #2βthe dramatic clouds, the line of empty benches, and the jogger with the pigeons adds to the center.
I like the last shot the most.
daldds wrote:
Three different days, different places.
In the middle image, I tried from my hotel balcony to grab the fog that was a line in a depression in the hills of northern New Jersey. New Jersey does not have real mountains, so I can't call it mountain fog.
The last two are 24 hours apart, plus or minus a couple of minutes.
The skies are especially nice. Even the real mountains on the East Coast are like hills compared to the mountains we have out West. Some around two miles high.
Good eye and execution, David!
joecichjr
Loc: Chicago S. Suburbs, Illinois, USA
daldds wrote:
Three different days, different places.
In the middle image, I tried from my hotel balcony to grab the fog that was a line in a depression in the hills of northern New Jersey. New Jersey does not have real mountains, so I can't call it mountain fog.
The last two are 24 hours apart, plus or minus a couple of minutes.
Really beautiful work on your part, especially on that shot with the rays of sunlight streaking down in the distance πππππ
More excellent posts, thanks for the effort.
Nice natural and beautiful, not photoshopped to death, like some landscapes shown here.
I choose not to critique most of them because I would be insulting them.
But I must say your work is refreshing and naturally beautiful.... Thank you
Thanks, everyone.
Yes, I do use PS after LR. Because I shoot in raw, I need to restore the image to show why I took it in the first place. Mostly, in this type of landscape photography, I shoot to avoid burning out the light areas, which means, consequently, that I have to open up the shadows. But that's about it.
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