Crop Corner

Tips, tutorials, and inspiration for your scrapbook

How to Photograph Autumn Color

Filed under: Photography — Excerpt from: i Can Garden on Thursday, June 8, 2006

(Note from Andrea:  Although this article is about photographing fall color - and summer is just starting - I thought it was interesting enough to share.)


There’s no bad time of day to photograph fall color. As with most landscape work, the morning and late afternoon often provide the most interesting shadows. As veteran travel photographer Susan McCartney often points out, “It’s best to photograph outdoors when your shadow is longer than you are.” Early morning may bring fog or mist that will provide a soft background, along with long shadows. The rich golden light just before sunset transforms not only leaves on trees, but those on the ground as well. However, there are also opportunities mid-day. With the sun overhead, you can use backlighting to make leaves glow in your photographs, as in the photo above. Notice how the warm late afternoon light, coupled with the long shadows turns this field into a rich pattern of color.

(Read the full article...)

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