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Placing your primary subject into silhouette can produce a dramatic and highly evocative image. The making of great photos is largely based upon an appreciation and application of light.
Light is transmitted from one or more sources, natural or artificial, either directly or, via diffusion or reflection, through the camera's lens and onto the sensor. That seems to me to be a relatively straightforward explanation of the most fundamental aspect of photography, to illuminate and then record the subject or scene upon which a composition is based. But it's the transformational and transcendental properties of light and how it encourages photographer and viewer alike to move beyond the relatively mundane objects depicted e.
I hope that idea is evident in my photo of partly submerged tree branches, photographed in silhouette, at Barkers Reservoir near the small town of Harcourt in Central Victoria, Australia. The use of backlight to create a silhouette was foremost in my mind when I made this image.
And I needed to be there at sunset to do so. Sunset light reflected off the surface of the reservoir rendering the darker, largely unlit tree branches into silhouette. The low angle of light also created shadows immediately in front of the branches which achieved the following:.