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“Land of the Larches”

 
© 2013 Thousand Word Images by Dustin Abbott

One of the nice consolation prizes once most all of the hardwood leaves have fallen here in the North is the turning of the larches. These beauties appear coniferous but are actually deciduous. Their “needles” turn a rich golden color, and they stand out beautifully against the deep greens of evergreens. The Algonquin word for these is “tamarack”, and they often referred to by that name. I found a place quite a bit north of me where the railroad tracks are still in and the larches grow thickly. It was cold outside, but the larches bring their own kind of warmth.

Here are links to a series of workflow articles that I wrote for Alien Skin Software if you want to take a look here, here, and here :

 
Technical information Canon EOS 6D, Tamron SP 24-70 VC, Processed in Adobe Lightroom 5, Photoshop CC and Exposure 5
Tags: Adobe Lightroom 5, Adobe Photoshop CC, Alien Skin Exposure 5, Autumn, Beautiful, Blue, Canada, Canon EOS 6D, Cold, Deep Color, Deep Depth of Field, Diminishing Perspective, Dustin Abbott, dustinabbott.net, Fall, Fine Art, Full Frame, Golden Hour, Handheld, Larch, Ontario, Pembroke, Petawawa, Railroad Tracks, Sky, Tamron SP 24-70mm f/2.8 VC USD, Thousand Word Images, Trees, Tamarack



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