Just before the sun disappeared behind the western hills, a shaft of light stretched out to touch these grasses. I half expected Fenris-wolf to appear from the dark beyond.
You know, this is one that doesn't quite work for me. The distant trees are wonderfully suggestive but the grass in the front doesn't look real. It's that sharp line separating light from dark, I think; and the light part is so light, it drowns out the rest of the image.
I always find that it's difficult to convey the real sense of light in an otherwise darkening forest. In some ways I think these kinds of images work better in black and white. I don't know why, but color seems to reduce the impact.
RR, thank you. I was lucky with the light, although in this photo I might not have done it justice.
Robin Andrea and Anne-Marie — thanks for the thoughtful comments. I've just posted the black and white version; identical except for the colour. However, the photo still might not work — as I mentioned to RR, I simply might not have done justice to the light.
What a wonderfully powerful image.
ReplyDeleteIt also puts me in mind of my favourite literary quotation....'meanwhile, in another part of the forest...'
You know, this is one that doesn't quite work for me. The distant trees are wonderfully suggestive but the grass in the front doesn't look real. It's that sharp line separating light from dark, I think; and the light part is so light, it drowns out the rest of the image.
ReplyDeleteI always find that it's difficult to convey the real sense of light in an otherwise darkening forest. In some ways I think these kinds of images work better in black and white. I don't know why, but color seems to reduce the impact.
ReplyDeleteRR, thank you. I was lucky with the light, although in this photo I might not have done it justice.
ReplyDeleteRobin Andrea and Anne-Marie — thanks for the thoughtful comments. I've just posted the black and white version; identical except for the colour. However, the photo still might not work — as I mentioned to RR, I simply might not have done justice to the light.