Winter in eastern North Carolina comes in one color: brown.
Winter rains transform open ground into a morass of dirt and mud, covered by the winter winds with a blanket of dead leaves and pine straw, leaving barren trees standing as skeletal sentinels waiting for spring’s resurrection.
In this scene of seasonal tedium I discovered a hint of things to come:
Our assignment was this:
Capture the natural world with your camera: document a moment outside, big or small. From a panorama snapped during your morning hike to a close-up of a leaf in your yard, we invite you to document this wondrous world around us.
Can’t go outside? Photograph something — furniture, architecture, etc. — that looks or feels organic, or mimics the shapes and movements of nature.
Today’s Tip: Exploring the outdoors, with camera in hand, is an opportunity to look for natural lines that lead our eyes to different parts of a frame. Envision the bend of a stream, or the curve of a petal: how can you use these lines in your composition? If you see strong vertical, horizontal, or diagonal lines, can you play with the orientation to create a more dynamic composition? Can you apply — or break — the “Rule of Thirds“?
I find a sort of beauty in the asymmetrical radial lines of the pine cone against the horizontal wood grain.
I’m also kind of proud; this is the first time I can recall producing any sort of natural soft focus in the background.
What do you think?



Your photo is absolutely beautiful. The kind of warm beauty of color and clarity of detail I would like in photos all over my house…to look at a few times a day. I am in awe of that photo.
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Thank you so much for the kind words!
I’m just now getting into digital photography; I think this is one of my personal favorites, too.
It was one of those rare instances where everything came together at the right time; I was simply there to capture it.
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