Ahhhh Blogger, you've updated several times recently and things are now harder to use and my original settings have been changed, hidden or apparently are no longer applicable. Something to keep me on my toes I guess.
We went for a walk on a local trail. It's one with a nice boardwalk beside the river. I suggested we take this one because soon our weather will change. The cold, wet and snow will make the boardwalk slippery and difficult to traverse. We no longer take this trail in the winter because it's just not fun. Winter walks on the trails can be a little bit harder, but not so much fun when you're also dealing with ice patches or long lengths of snow covered rutted ice, which is what that boardwalk becomes.
However, in the nice weather, this trail is interesting. All the Ash trees have been cut and left lying around, so that it looks in places like something out of a bad Sci-Fi movie. The trail runs right beside a train track and an industrial area, so there is sometimes a non-nature like soundtrack to accompany the walk. Today though, it was the light creating interesting reflections on the river which caught my attention. They were very clear, as the water was oddly still.
The trail was pretty despite the many downed logs. I noticed that there were some new ones which weren't Ash trees, and there were some still standing which should be cut down as they were obviously going to be a falling risk soon. Mostly the woods have young trees. There isn't a lot of undergrowth in places, so the visuals of looking through the forest is interesting. The undergrowth usually obscures this.
It was lovely tromping through the fallen leaves. This was just before the windstorm which meant the landscape went from lovely fall colours, to stark, empty trees in one afternoon. Waking up the next morning to virtually no leaves left on the trees was interesting. It was like we had an autumn colour season which went from green, to full colour, to bare trees in just over a week. I didn't even get a lot of photos of the fall foliage just because the timing was so quick.
There is always an exception though. This maple always colours last, and always holds its leaves. It's just starting to drop its leaves and the colour is still turning. It's really lovely this year as it's changed from the usually all yellow leaves, to yellow, orange and red. I have a loom looking out the window at it, and it's always lovely to weave in the autumn with that view in sight.
I've been working on this year's Xmas cards. I've found if I don't start by the beginning of November, they become a bit rushed and stressed. I'd trialed several ideas. I watched a bunch of online tutorials for new techniques and ended up just painting something simple. I like them well enough, although my brain tells me that they still need something. I'm not sure it does though. Only had 2 mishaps, one where the tape stuck and ripped a bit of the painting and the other when I was mucking around with the sky ideas and I ended up with one which was too dark for my liking.
I tried the remove background feature and it did, relatively well, although it did dump some black spots on the one card, which aren't there in real life. Also, I haven't figured out how to not have the original save as the edit. On my old computer, I could just save the edited photo as a different name, but this one applies everything to the original. This works really well for when I'm writing things up as but I'll still need to figure out the photograph part of things.
I did figure it out but I like the photo with the messy background better. I painted 15 landscapes for Xmas cards, all similar but not quite the same, just to keep things interesting for me.