Over the years. I’ve read a lot of articles and image captions, where people claimed “photos cannot do justice for the redwoods”. The comments often referred to photos falling-short of conveying size. It may be that most of them do not know how to compose that type of image. But I realized that the bigger the redwood is, the harder can be to take-in the entire size. I recall my first visit to one of the 10 largest coast redwoods. I did not realize it was a titan tree, because walking nearby around it, I could see about one quarter circumference. What photos can’t convey is the “feel” of the redwood forest; the scents or feeling you get standing in a grove.
But to convey size, a photo can do more justice than trying to explain it. Consider the composite image National Geographic printed October 2009. The view that the photographer captured was a sight none of the research climbers could ever see. The climbers could see pieces each climb. But never that much in one view. Especially with a human for scale.
If you photograph with a person for scale and want to accurately convey a redwood’s size, ask them to stand half way back at the side of the trunk. Not behind it and not in front of it. Just mid-way.
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