Bryce National Park is one of my most favorite. I was stunned immediately when I saw the rows of rows and hundreds of hundreds of hoodoos standing in front of me. They are all in the same shape, but wait, they are all in different shapes. When looking at each individual one, from different angle you would find the hoodoo shows different personalities. What a natural wonder! In winter when snow covered part of hoodoos, the white and red somehow mix together, Plus little bit green from fir trees...
This time in the lower part of Bryce the weather was pretty while in the upper part the snow flakes were flying. It was very chilly. The snow on the ground was more than 3 feet tall at the top part of the park. Compared to my last trip, some trails are closed due to snow or collapsing hoodoos . The Hoodoos seems very fragile and on the trail I could hear and see rocks falling down. I believe the whole Utah should have no earthquakes. Or most of beauties of those national parks in Utah would no longer exists.
what is "vibrance"? I usually do little on my photos. Only trimming, changing the exposure, changing saturation or changing the contrast would be used if I thought the photo need some repair or polish. I'm really a beginner on PS.
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Thanks for your suggestion. Yeah, the snow photo's white balance and exposure was not so good. It was very cold and started snowing when I took this photo. I just wanted to keep a record on the snow at that time. That photo was an original.
How about this? I raised the exposure and trim it a little bit.
Thank you very much! This one is much better after you trimmed it, if you would like to express the snow, you do not need too much trees over there. I guess you put your camera very low to take the picture. If you could trim the No.5 with only small amount of snow left, which will show more the column you would like to focus, it will be much better. Thank you again. I am sorry to say this in public. But I think we will all learn from your work.