It was supposed to be oh, so simple. I was in New England at leaf-peeping season and every now and then, I'd get a chance to sneak off and take a shot or two. One day, when I couldn't stop as I was on my way to the airport, I saw the most fascinating tree. One side was a deep green of late summer and the other side was a brilliant red of fall.
Try as I might, I couldn't locate that tree again, or perhaps by the time I got back the colors had turned dull. Nonetheless, I took it as a queue to try to get some foliage shots when I got a chance. I finally found a tree that was bright red all over. Trying to get the shot was another situation altogether.
From the side there were telephone poles and numerous heavy cables blocking the view. Another tree blocked the view from the other side. From another angle across the street, where they had cut limbs for power lines, the tree had an awkward shape. With the sun directly behind me, the wind had flipped most of the leaves showing their dull backsides! One last hope - shoot directly into the sun and use the tree trunk to block out most of the sun's rays. Trickier than I thought.
Depending upon exposure, either the trunk was black in shadow or the sky was bright white with the leaves bleached out. In the end I had to shoot bracketed exposures and try to blend the result in post processing. Not a great compromise but better than not getting the shot at all - maybe.
In the end it was quite a challenge to get a decent image shooting directly into the sun. The result has it's obvious faults but is it worth keeping? Or, should I just wait for next year to try again?
Keep as an also ran, or toss?