Hello Tom, this is Bernd from Germany. This is a short but helpfull video concerning autumn photography. Great! There´s one additional remark concerning tip 1: Go out and photograph when there´s mist or after rain showers. Specially beech trees (pine trees too) get black and more seperated from the foliage. By a circulare polarizer you can reduce the reflections on the leaves.
Great video, full of accessible, relatable tips and presented so well. Subscribed! I just wish I wasn't colour blind so i could enjoy these colours properly! Haha
Hi, I watched your video, and I put some advice in practice on photos I recently shot in the superb Canadian autumn (I know, it's unfair). So, I forgot saturation and vibrance and just played a little bit with contrast, which I usually never use. And it worked perfectly! Thanks for these great tips!
When you consider tree colors, that will be under the term Phenology, which is basically the timing of nature. When something should happen throughout the year.
An added note. Some times. Shrink the composition. Try to create a desire of " wanting to enter your work. I had an experience , one early spring day. I was scouting, no camera, for future sites. Came upon a small " woods" . No grass ..just bare ground. The circle of trees, branches so enclosed, sunlight did not get in. The leaves had just emerged. Enough to shut out the sun's rays but acted like color lenses. I was standing in a bright emerald green light. All I could do was just enjoy the light. It was kind of like an " OZ " moment. Went back many times over the spring seasons. That moment never happened again.
Hello all! I don’t entirely agree with point 8. My mobile camera has this horrible tendency to desaturate colours quite a bit and darken the image when using the telephoto lens. Increasing the saturation and/or vibrancy as well as the brightness is necessary to get more accurate colours.
Hello Tom, this is Bernd from Germany. This is a short but helpfull video concerning autumn photography. Great! There´s one additional remark concerning tip 1: Go out and photograph when
there´s mist or after rain showers. Specially beech trees (pine trees too) get black and more seperated from the foliage. By a circulare polarizer you can reduce the reflections on the leaves.
You have some great tips ,especially opening up the aperture and setting the WB to shade.
Out today for some woodland photography with a group. Thanks for the tips, nice work..............
Great photographic advice. And without a camera in sight. Clever stuff.
Thanks for the great tips Tom.
Great advice, thanks
This explains why my woodland photos look dead and grey. I must try these tips.
Very helpful. Many thanks.
First time watching, sorry but I can’t get Alan Partridge out of my mind when watching & listening to you!
I hadn't noticed it, but now you mention it, definitely!
Great video, full of accessible, relatable tips and presented so well. Subscribed!
I just wish I wasn't colour blind so i could enjoy these colours properly! Haha
Thank you! Good help!
Hi, I watched your video, and I put some advice in practice on photos I recently shot in the superb Canadian autumn (I know, it's unfair). So, I forgot saturation and vibrance and just played a little bit with contrast, which I usually never use. And it worked perfectly! Thanks for these great tips!
Thanks, great video 🙂
Great tips! 🍂🍁
Great video and advice 👍🙂
Great tips!
MANY THANKS👍👍
Very nice tips thank You 🤝🤝🤝
Beech trees in autumn 🍂 :)
I agree about the temptation to ignore details in favor of the broader landscape. I guess it's not seeing the trees for the forest.
When you consider tree colors, that will be under the term Phenology, which is basically the timing of nature. When something should happen throughout the year.
One wee secret. Watch the light on a composition.....360 degree circle. Don't be afraid to pause, look back on the walk.
An added note. Some times. Shrink the composition. Try to create a desire of " wanting to enter your work.
I had an experience , one early spring day. I was scouting, no camera, for future sites. Came upon a small " woods" . No grass ..just bare ground. The circle of trees, branches so enclosed, sunlight did not get in. The leaves had just emerged. Enough to shut out the sun's rays but acted like color lenses. I was standing in a bright emerald green light. All I could do was just enjoy the light. It was kind of like an " OZ " moment. Went back many times over the spring seasons. That moment never happened again.
🥰🥰🥰🥰
Hello all! I don’t entirely agree with point 8. My mobile camera has this horrible tendency to desaturate colours quite a bit and darken the image when using the telephoto lens. Increasing the saturation and/or vibrancy as well as the brightness is necessary to get more accurate colours.
Yes, I think you're right due to the lens limitations sometimes phone photos do need a bit of extra help.
@@yorkshirephotowalks Thanks! 🙂
But your trousers are so weird !
Thanks for this video 😊.