Here’s a color version with the changes proposed by the chorus and a few additional tweaks from me (mostly in some brush work and a couple of eye-magnets cloned out).
My last two from my May bushwhacking trip along the Prairie river. It’s the same set of cascades from my very first post here on NPN. This time the rocks were SUPER slippery since it was raining a little. And I had my small tripod so no hanging the center column over the water. Quite honestly I wouldn’t have risked it even if I had that one with me. Wet moss is treacherous and I had already slipped and bashed my knee trying to get those trillium photos. The things we suffer for our art.
On my first post, @Ed_McGuirk suggested a reversal of the image to present a left-right water flow when in reality it is right-left. I liked the idea so did one here and also switched it up to monochrome, something I don’t often do when the greens are this vivid. On the left is the same log as is a foreground element in the other two recent posts.
Specific Feedback Requested
Which do you prefer? Should I flip it and leave it in color? Don’t flip it and change it to monochrome? Both? Any other suggestions welcome. I have a few other views as well. There is more white water to the left, but so much dark water on each side of it that it wasn’t really contributing so I cropped it.
Technical Details
Is this a composite: No
Lumix G9
Lumix G Vario 12-35mm f/2.8 lens @ 12mm (24mm equiv.)
f/14 | 1 sec. | ISO 100
Polarizer on tripod
Lr processed for a crop & b&w conversion and a lot of tonal management w/local adjustment brush. The color got the same, but left the saturation fairly low since it was rich to begin with. Lens correction done on both.