I thought it was a shot of a tropical tree for a second .. Agree with Calabrese but it’s one of those broccoli/cauliflower group if not.Calabrese?
I've titled if Sycamore Gap!I thought it was a shot of a tropical tree for a second .. Agree with Calabrese but it’s one of those broccoli/cauliflower group if not.
Zooming in I'd say they are leaves.I thought broccoli at first but looking more closely they look like leaves rather than florets so I’m going to go for curly kale
A light one this morning, but all gone before nine.No frosts there yet?
For me it's about forms, i.e. finding shape and patterns in the landscape but I suspect to some extent its popularity is due to it being low hanging fruit and something that can be incorporated into a walk, family day out or a holiday.I'm back to being baffled by the popularity of landscape photography
Alongside the fact that the landscape is always there I think there's also an aspect of not having to interact with people as subjects in a lot of cases, plus an element of escapism/romanticism.For me it's about forms, i.e. finding shape and patterns in the landscape but I suspect to some extent its popularity is due to it being low hanging fruit and something that can be incorporated into a walk, family day out or a holiday.
This initial edit is concentrating more on the graphic pictures. As I went through the near 3000 frames I realised there were more of the documentary type pictures than I'd thought. I'll attack them next and either make two sets or find a way to combine them.It's very interesting to see them like that. It's clear how graphic many of the images are, perhaps to the extent of overwhelming the more documentary content. Although the best can have both, obviously...
For me it's about forms, i.e. finding shape and patterns in the landscape but I suspect to some extent its popularity is due to it being low hanging fruit and something that can be incorporated into a walk, family day out or a holiday.
I find the graphical quality of these very pleasing, though there does appear to be a modest amount of apparent duplication at this scale.
This is just an unordered selection, that one will most likely go in the next round of culls, along with others which are duplicating each other.The one placement I don't get is the muddy field with ruts forming an X being placed to one side, rather than using it as a pivot point for the whole collection.
No need to apologise.Local patch
Meanygate meanderings
Rural landscapes
A year in the country
Apologies if any of those are horrible clichés, or indeed a title from elsewhere
I started with Growth Patterns and changed it at the last minute!Or even Patterns Of Growth?
No need to apologise.
Something along those lines might end up being used for the overall project collection. But for this selection this is currently this is in the running.
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Growing Patterns does have the advantage of shades of meaning — they are patterns of things growing but also the patterns are growing/changing and so on.