Interesting photo, Jack.

The setting and composition are classical and beautifully done. The  
tree doesn't intrude to my eye, it poses a reasonable amount of   
foreground framing. The color balance is a little warm for me, but  
that could be monitor settings or just my taste vs yours. I like the  
way the shapes of the barn are mirrored in the shapes of the mountain  
range beyond it, it's certainly a "calendar" or "postcard" worthy  
photo. This web-rez version has a little bit of sharpening halo here  
and there, I'm sure your finish print doesn't.

The problem I have with it is that with the warm tones and shapes  
being very similar, the barn's outline and details tends to merge  
with the background of mountains to some degree. If you reduce it to  
B&W with a simple desaturate, you can see what I mean very clearly. I  
find that if I use the channel mixer and hit the Red channel a lot  
higher, the background lightens and the barn stands out better and  
echoes the mountains without merging. This says to me that just a  
little bit of light-shaping, to soften or lighten the backdrop  
mountains in the realm of the barn, would enhance the subject isolation.

Might be something to experiment with if you have a mind to. It's a  
lovely shot, I'd certainly like to see its innate qualities retained  
or enhanced if nothing else.

Godfrey

On Oct 24, 2006, at 1:46 PM, Jack Davis wrote:

> ...Early on a semi cloudy morning. I've often wondered if I should  
> have
> included so much of the tree on the left.(?)
> LX, and I believe an A-28~80 f/3.5-4.5. (don't recall film)..not
> Velvia.
>
> http://photolightimages.com/aspupload/detail.asp?ID=191


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