It’s a classic viewpoint – at the head of Loch Tay standing on the shores at Kenmore, looking down the length of the loch past the Crannog and island to mountains in the distance. Even without dramatic contrasty sunlight, it didn’t disappoint.
A classic view down the length of Loch Tay, hints of mist in the distant mountains and trees on the foreground island.
A classic view down the length of Loch Tay, hints of mist in the distant mountains and trees on the foreground island.
A classic view down the length of Loch Tay, hints of mist in the distant mountains and trees on the foreground island.
A classic view down the length of Loch Tay, hints of mist in the distant mountains and trees on the foreground island.
For the record, these were both 8-second exposures, around f/4.5 and ISO 400 using a Nisi circular polariser filter to balance the light between sky and reflection. Both images are a pair stacked for noise-reduction.