A really good composition, here. Gets your brain working overtime. A hard right entrance lead-in, and everything from there leads left. One big pine tree, and everything else barren hardwoods. Good balance and high apparent motion in a static subject. Impressive.
This is what winter is puppose to feel like ... cold. I like the angles of the various elements ... fence, line of trees, & the path. Excellent capture Sandi ... top notch detail too.
Yesterday was the first day we got enough snow to track a rabbit, so that means 13 snow storms this winter. Looks like a lovely place to walk, Sandy, as long as you have boots on.
My thanks to all who leave comments for my work and to those of you who like one enough to make it a favourite. To touch just one person that way makes each image worthwhile. . . . . . . . . .. . . . "The question is not what you look at, but what you see" ~ Marcel Proust
I was just viewing your image with the attractive young lady crossing a stream, and see now such a scene. What a contrast! Hope it won't amaze you that I'm shivering now, lol.
A very beautiful photo! I enjoy the way the foreground fence (gate?) leads the eye from left to right, then the creek, row of saplings, and even the fallen tree, all lead the eye back to the left and to the end of the road. The colors are earthy and true. Visual poetry.
Hmm, I think I like this one better than the rework. I am not sure that I like that teal tint on the top, it is out of harmony with the rest of the image. And yes, the lack of any focal point in this image makes for a dynamic shot, I like how it forces the eye to travel. Brings to mind Robert Frost's poem, "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening". I think I'd like to see what this place looks like at dusk.