What do you do when there is a tree/electric pole/etc that you can't exclude from the frame in outdoor people photography (environmental portrait for example)?
I see many of them ending up on top of one of my subject's head. I think I have done it in the past probably thinking that I can hide as much of the hideous pole/tree behind my subject. (TBH, I only learned that a tree or a pole sprouting out from the top of a person's head is bad composition recently, and ever since have become conscious about it.)
Often you can re-compose so the eye-sore is not sitting on top of a subject's head, but there is only so much you can do and the tree/pole has to end up somewhere in the frame. Maybe it's because I've become so conscious of tree and poles in a composition, but when there is a tree/pole anywhere in the photo, it looks so distracting.
What's a good way to compose a scene when there is a not-so-pretty tree/electric pole/traffic sign/you name it in the scene that you just can't exclude?