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5 Tips to Dramatically Improve Golden Hour Landscapes


We have all heard this right? Golden Hour is by far the best time for photographing landscapes. We have a lot of colours and dramatic light and atmosphere during that time. Lets start with Golden Hour - it is the period of time just before Sunrise and just after Sunset where the light is more colourful and saturated, and it will almost always come to any landscape photographer's advantage. The question is, how?


Here I am sharing my five favourite tips to absolutely ravish your golden hour shots! Lets begin.



1. Look for Side-lit or Back-lit Subjects

Even when you are clicking photos in golden hour, the light needs to be dramatic on your subject. The composition will hugely vary on this basis. Look for subjects which are light from the side or back, giving a stunning effect on the whole image. From the above examples, in the first image from Chatakpur, the light is hitting from the side of the trees in the woods and in the second image from my hometown, it is hitting right from behind the clouds, creating a dramatic scene. You can see how enthralling the overall image becomes when the light falls on them from the best directions possible.



2. Check for Contrast in The Frame

Make sure to have a habit to look for contrast in the frame because Golden Hour will be automatically providing it to you, you just need to find it. The highlights will be very bright and the shadows will be equally dark - so, by definition, you already have contrast. Utilize it in the best way possible. In the above two images (first one taken at Rishyap, North Bengal and the second one taken at Simana, Nepal border), you can find contrast between foreground and background. While in the first one, the man standing on the nearby cliff and the clouds provide opposition to the rays, in the second one, it is the layers of the mountains that have supported the clouds in creating the immense contrast in the frame.



3. Use Filters and get Creative

Use ND Filters and create stunning long exposure and/or slow shutter images which will have an absolutely different feel on the images as a whole. This technique will obviously work with images where there is motion, so try it on your waterscapes - seas, oceans, waterfalls and the like. In these images, the first one is a Sunrise shot at Gopalpur while the second one is a Sunset shot at Kanyakumari. In both the images, you can see how the movement of the water has been caught in a very creative way, thus making them different.



4. Try Silhouettes

Since we already know golden hour provides a lot of contrast and good back-lit images, combining them will give you brilliant silhouette structures to work with. Choose the correct subject and create a silhouette out of it by putting it properly in the frame. Either put them in your foreground (what I mostly do) or in the midground, get creative with silhouettes. In the first example from Chitre, I have put the range of pine trees on the mountain as a simple silhouette for a clean image. In the second example from Rishyap, the tree in the foreground is the silhouette and providing balance to the main subject which is the hill beside on which the sunrays are falling.



5. Work with both wide and tele lenses

Use both wide angle and telephoto lenses to create more dramatic frames during golden hour. If you find an image where there is a lot of interesting elements in the foreground while the background creates more of a subject, use an ultra-wide or a wide angle lens, like in the first photo from Kanyakumari. In the second photo from Rishyap, the mountain was very far away and I used my telephoto lens to take the shot.



Conclusion

Shooting at the Golden Hour is one of my most-favourite photography ways, if not the most one. I have shot a huge amount of images in this time of the day. Along with Blue hour, this time of the day provides stunning light conditions for every landscape photographer to use. I hope this blog helps you with some basic ideas of improving your golden hour photography.


Thanks for reading! See you next time. Till then, Keep clicking, keep creating!



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