Forests, for me, have always been one of those subjects that should provide better photographs than they actually do. I think it's the chaos and clutter: it's hard to find order amongst the random scattering of trees. Good photos have a
purpose, a subject stands out and turns a photo from a mere collection of pixels (or silver halide, if you're into that sort of thing...) into a photo of
something. I have always found subjects hard to pick out in forests. I went to Cratloe, a nearby wood, this morning with the hope of finding trees shrouded in fog. By the time I hauled my lazy ass up there, the fog was inevitably gone. Faced with the prospect of yet another disspointing trip to a wood, I decided to try something different: I stuck my oft-neglected 50mm f.1.8 onto the camera. I was suprised how well this worked. At f1.8, or f2, this lens turns a seemingly chaotic scene into one with a single, well-defined subject. These aren't my favourite photos ever, but I'm happy enough with how they turned out.
Another thing that I find hard about photos of trees and woods is the post-processing. I tried fiddling around with the green and yellow channels in Lightroom, and this is what I came up with. I'm not sure if it's over the top or not.
![DSC_1108](http://static.zooomr.com/images/6071362_3add78a7a3_o.jpg)
![DSC_1095](http://static.zooomr.com/images/6071358_135d318eff_o.jpg)
![DSC_1082](http://static.zooomr.com/images/6071357_8b82161298_o.jpg)
![DSC_1076](http://static.zooomr.com/images/6071352_5af0aa50e0_o.jpg)
![DSC_1053](http://static.zooomr.com/images/6071350_dd2e633454_o.jpg)
![DSC_1052](http://static.zooomr.com/images/6071344_3a03219e4b_o.jpg)
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