Like I said before, it's hard to go wrong when you follow the advice of a local. I was there early enough to get the pre-dawn shot I'd visualized in my mind -- rows of shadowy mountain ridges against a colorful sky.
To the east, some of the area's namesake "smoke" was rolling up and over the mountains.
What I originally thought was a lake to the south turned out to also be "smoke" -- or rather, a valley full of fog.
The colors in the sky were not fading as quickly as I had thought they might. Plenty of time for a more panoramic take on those ridges.
The actual sunrise came gently -- almost meekly. This three-image HDR blend makes the sky much more vivid than it actually was in person. I actually had to reduce the vibrance and saturation in Lightroom to something a little less "hyperreal."
I'd been fussing with my circular polarizer that morning and the previous evening, blaming it for unwanted lens flares in some of my shots. So I took it off when I left, but then pulled over to take another crack at the clouds that were continuing to pour in. I did get less lens flare, but I also got some pretty bland color. So after a thorough cleaning, back on the camera the polarizer went. :)
A rewarding half an hour to be sure. I even got to see Comet Neowise, which I mistakenly thought was Venus until a nice stargazer gently corrected me. All of this before 7 a.m., no less!
2 comments:
You improve with every click of the shutter. You’ve gone from gifted to great.
Wow, thank you so much! That's very kind. :)
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