2018 Colorado Fall Color Road Trip – Day 3 – Sunset
After early and mid-morning photos on day 3 along Owl Creek Pass Road, I drove around exploring other areas and spur roads off of the main forest road, looking for another suitable campsite that would put me near a place for sunset photos. Many of the best campsites were already taken and I ended up across the creek from my first night’s campsite, where I saw a couple of hunters breaking camp. I pulled into the site, struck up a conversation with the hunters, the younger one a chemical engineer from Missouri and son-in law of the older one from Arkansas. The older hunter has been coming to this area since the 1970s. They had been elk hunting, unsuccessfully; but they had an antler shed, which they offered to me. Having no desire for the shed, I left it at the campsite for someone else to find. After they finished loading their considerable camping and hunting equipment, including an OHV, onto a trailer and into their pickup trucks, they headed out and I moved into the flattest area of the site. This campsite was very open and it was a sunny day, so I put out the solar panels and allowed them to charge the Sportsmobile batteries, until about an hour before sunset, then I packed those away, since I did not want to pack them up after dark and I expected it would be dark soon after my sunset shots.
The views from this site were very similar to those on my first night and first morning of camping, but with more trees and the creek between me and the mountainside. I walked around the area and down along the creek, looking for suitable places from which to shoot, then had a sandwich, potato chips and Gatorade for dinner, while waiting for the late afternoon light.
The photos from this site were so similar to those from the first day of shooting and with more clutter in the foreground, that I initially thought about not including any in this blog; but as I looked at them a second time, I thought some might look better, if converted to monotone or edited with one of my other image editors, in addition to Lightroom adjustments to the raw images. So I did just that, experimenting with Nik Silver Effects Pro and Color Effects 4 and Skylum Luminar 2018 software.
The photos posted here are also posted to Flickr (just click on an image), where the images will be sharper and brighter than in this post.
The opinions expressed about the images here are my subjective ones. I welcome your feedback, opinions and critiques, as I can always use those to improve my work.
2 thoughts on “2018 Colorado Fall Color Road Trip – Day 3 – Sunset”
I have enjoyed your editing and explanations of these photos. Photography is so subjective and always fun to edit photos for a different effect. That large cliff face shot south of your campsite was especially dramatic!
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Thanks, Fay. I like that cliff face shot in the B&W version, too. I was really disappointed by the lighting in the original color version and seriously considered not posting that shot or any of the others from that shoot; but after the conversion to B&W, I was amazed at how good it looked. I have become more interested in B&W over the past year or so, maybe because I have seen so many great B&W images from the days before color was so easily available. I used to think that since we see in color, it only made sense to shoot in color; but now I see that from an art point of view, B&W is a good way to go.
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I have enjoyed your editing and explanations of these photos. Photography is so subjective and always fun to edit photos for a different effect. That large cliff face shot south of your campsite was especially dramatic!
Thanks, Fay. I like that cliff face shot in the B&W version, too. I was really disappointed by the lighting in the original color version and seriously considered not posting that shot or any of the others from that shoot; but after the conversion to B&W, I was amazed at how good it looked. I have become more interested in B&W over the past year or so, maybe because I have seen so many great B&W images from the days before color was so easily available. I used to think that since we see in color, it only made sense to shoot in color; but now I see that from an art point of view, B&W is a good way to go.