Why sepia? The English countryside in Winter, for all its vivid greens, its flashes of red berries and orange sunsets, feels sepia - an emanation, perhaps, of cold clay soil.
6 comments:
Anonymous
said...
Beautiful! I like sepia too. I don't know why I don't use it more. I think you have more open space as a contrast to the intricate lace works of bare branches. That white branch is very evocative.
6 comments:
Beautiful! I like sepia too. I don't know why I don't use it more. I think you have more open space as a contrast to the intricate lace works of bare branches. That white branch is very evocative.
But, how do you say it? SEE pee ah, or Sep-ya, other?
SEE pee ah. And you?
That last photo really speaks to me.
I like the fact that sepia was originally made from squid ink. The color itself isn't always my first choice for a monochrome.
These are lovely.
Thinking on sepia...
Here via both Elizabeth and Beth...
What lovely pictures!
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