12 thoughts on “The Prince of Snow.

  1. A.Hackauf's avatar

    Peter, wonderful, wonderful, wonderful..how you seperate the subject from the background..totally natural. The “humus” takes effect 😉 Congrats to the” breakout”! …..by the way, the rings are great.

  2. greg g49's avatar

    In the faintness of shadows, in the perfection of the crystalline forms of water, in the slowing of winter, and the quickening of its days, there are also beauties, like diamonds, all the dearer for their rarity and challenge of retrieval. This is lovely, and not without precedent; I seem to recall quite a number of delightful portraits you’ve taken in the winter months.

    Maybe its just my aging, but I’ve actually developed a fondness for winter light… if not exactly for the frigid temps 😉

  3. Karim D. Ghantous (@kdghantous)'s avatar

    Wonderful. Nice everything – composition, exposure, and the attention to background detail. Even the light is nice, considering. (I didn’t know that the Internet reinstated permission to shoot within the 200 yard radius from your home?)

    I still don’t think that the 3:2 aspect is suitable for vertical compositions, but you made all of it work here.

    1. Peter | Prosophos's avatar

      Yes, it works here because of the upper “layer”. In fact, a few rules were broken, but harmony was achieved. I love it when seemingly simple images have “more than meets the eye”. In truth, I would have kept this image even if it hadn’t worked technically, solely for the emotional appeal (to me).

      By the way, I actually didn’t break the Internet rule 😉

      (We are referring of course, to this: http://www.l-camera-forum.com/leica-forum/2874143-post66.html )

  4. andygemmell's avatar

    yes very nice Peter….bay window, with door and roof triangle working very nicely here. Your son’s hair, smile and the jacket he is wearing in the snow scene all come together!

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