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.
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.
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.
ReplyDeleteBut, how do you say it? SEE pee ah, or Sep-ya, other?
ReplyDeleteSEE pee ah. And you?
ReplyDeleteThat last photo really speaks to me.
ReplyDeleteI like the fact that sepia was originally made from squid ink.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.
ReplyDeleteThinking on sepia...
Here via both Elizabeth and Beth...
ReplyDeleteWhat lovely pictures!