Creating mystery with a forest photograph

Creating mystery with a forest photograph

I enjoy walking through the woods – there is a calmness and a sense of peace and one of my favorite walks is quite a long way away from the snow-covered landscape currently outside my home in West Virginia! That walk is around the Wai Koa plantation on the gorgeous Hawaiian island of Kauai. How I wish I was there now! I guess I will have to rely on my memories (and my photos) to bring back the warmth of that place. The walk itself ends up at a beautiful little garden that has been formed around an old stone dam across the river:

Five-mile Wai Koa Loop trail leads to historic stone dam used to irrigate plantation on Kauai, Hawaii. Full product details can be found in my store
Five-mile Wai Koa Loop trail leads to historic stone dam used to irrigate plantation on Kauai, Hawaii. Full product details can be found here.

But the question I am exploring today is one of how to photograph a forest? Your eye can focus on details or scan across the scene, but in a photograph, it can be a bit messy and not at all clear what we are expecting the viewer to focus on. Everything is there and often sharp and in focus, but nothing is very obvious as the subject. You can’t see the wood for the trees!

This image from this loop trail is a case in point. The trail passes through some very large mahogany tree plantations, all neatly arranged in lines as far as the eye can see:

Panorama of trunks in plantation of Mahogany trees in Kauai, Hawaii, USA. Full product details can be found in my store
Panorama of trunks in plantation of Mahogany trees in Kauai, Hawaii, USA. Full product details can be found here.

This was actually a panorama created from several images with the camera on a tripod (yes, I do carry a tripod on walks!) and rotated round for each image. And the focus in the center tree because it is larger and lighter than the rest, but there is so much detail!

My first attempt to simplify it was to use a technique in Photoshop called Motion Blur. You can create an effect in the camera where you move the camera vertically as you are taking the image itself and motion blur creates something similar, and you end up with a more simplified view of the forest:

Artistic blurred motion image of plantation of Mahogany trees in Kauai, Hawaii, USA
Artistic blurred motion image of plantation of Mahogany trees in Kauai, Hawaii, USA. Full product details can be found here.

This is much more worthy of a place on a wall. I think the first one would be great in a hotel – large scale on the wall by the elevators, for instance, but this one is much more intriguing.

I took this a step further by using an oil painting program that creates an impressionist effect. I still changed and modified it until I was happy with the result, but I am no painter!

Artistic oil painted blurred motion image of plantation of Mahogany trees in forest
Artistic oil painted blurred motion image of plantation of Mahogany trees in forest. Full product details can be found here

This is my personal favorite of the three, and I think would look great as a canvas print, or as a framed canvas print perhaps!

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This Post Has 4 Comments

    1. Thanks Louis! It was your post that inspired it!

  1. I find pine forests to be particularly difficult for the creation of compelling photography. However, like you, I do find that motion blur images can work quite well in that environment. I have done several of those types of photographs. I find deciduous forests much easier for creating photographs. For some inspiration try searching YouTube for “Woodlands Photography.” Several of our photography brotheren across the pond are quite adept and the genre. Nice post. I enjoyed it greatly.

    1. Thanks Bob! I’ve tried doing this in the camera as well, as I am sure you have. But that is impossible (I think) when you are creating a panorama at the same time.

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