I was surprised because it was winter, and as I noted in the first installment of this series yesterday, I’d visited the park that day to walk, not photograph. I just blindly presumed that snowless winter just wouldn’t lend itself to photography in a park.
Boy, was I wrong. This park has a woods of considerable acreage, and as I found out, its winter “look” is most definitely photogenic.
On this day, the compositions just kept jumping out at me. Such as the silhouette you see leading off the post. This presented itself on a lark; I happened to turn around on the walking trail to look back at that odd-shaped tree trunk, and lo and behold ... it gifted me a silhouette.
Moments earlier, approaching it from the other side, I certainly saw the odd shape, but I’d come across it before while walking the trail, and I had photographed it. So it was not new. But I’d never seen it in this backlit form. For those of you who haven’t seen it in a previous post, I present it below in normal exposure.
I was shooting in the same general direction when I took the gnarly branched tree trunk in the first two photos below, so the slight backlight make the tree trunk itself dark (as in the first photo). In post processing, I boosted shadow detail as show in the second photo below. Below that are a few other tree oddities I came across walking the trail.
And then there were the trees where yellow or bright brown leaves still clung to the branches, presenting striking vistas when surrounded by many other deciduous trees bereft of their leaves.













































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