I indicated earlier that my edit produced a different image, but I did not see any mysterious feel or abstract quality in the posted original. As a matter of fact, J Dogg's blue version which looked more like moonlight, created more mystery than the original as well.Originally Posted by gahspidy
If you keep up with landscape photography through magazines such as Outdoor Photography, Popular Photography and some of the Adobe related photo publishing for pros, you realize that subtle, soft, pale tones are out and bright, warm, rich, saturated colours are very much in. The emphasis is on the colour in colour photography and to bring "into focus" the colour and detail that the eye may have seen, but the camera missed. This is also the reason for concern for dynamic range and smooth tonal transitions.
Now, weak colour can be compensated for by excellent composition, but that means several elements working together and lack of detail in a dark area is not generally seen as a positive compositional element, nor is the necessity to crop the top part of the sky with the uniform grey cloud. The white building on the shore can also not tell, suggest, or imply a story if it is barely visible enough to even be noticed by the viewer. The earth on shore was the typical redish colour of the area in my edit, but not in the original.
So, I have no problem experimenting with and following some of the current trends in the pro community of landscape photographers since they coincide with elements of technique and composition that have always been the basis for artistic photography.
No surprise that not everyone agrees, since not everyone does landscape photography in any serious or professional manner and most have little knowledge and little experience in this area.
Ronnoco