While planning my trip to Rocky Mountain National Park, I found THIS IMAGE online and THIS IMAGE in a book. I did not take the images with me but followed the directions in the book to the spot described. We arrived before sunrise.
First of all, even though I followed directions, point of composition is further around the lake and is not as nice. But I think the biggest issue with the composition is the perspective from which it is shot. As I was standing out there waiting for the light, I knew without calm waters and some clouds I was not going to get the shot I wanted. But I was still excited to see the color that began on the mountain as shown in my first shot. (These images have had no processing except the default RAW processing done by Aperture.) Since I had seen several images with this great light on the WHOLE mountain, I was very disappointed that it disappeared and the color became so bland so quickly - as in my #2 photo.
So I started out to compose a question to all you great people about what conditions would create the great light that I didn't get - was it time of year, clouds or what? Then I realized that the perspectives on those other shots were way different from mine. Erik Stensland's photo might have even been taken from a kayak. Andy Cook's looks like it might have been from shore with the foreground elements, but his camera was at least positioned low to the ground whereas mine was at eye level. This left much less mountain to be covered in that great light and also made the trees more prominent which to me is a much more dramatic composition. (I suspect the shoreline point for them was also closer to the opposite side than where I was too)
I failed to do what Andy told us in class - walk around with the camera, look through the viewfinder from lots of perspectives - low, high, left, right to find your composition. THEN set up the tripod. I walked around til I could clearly see the mountain, found a rock for foreground interest and then set up the tripod at eye level. (I did at least look at the DOF table this time to make sure my foreground subjects would be in focus ) Surely someday all these failures are going to stick in my head... or maybe I started this hobby too late in life!
#1
#2