From a walk down this old cemetery road.

Outside Charleston, South Carolina.
Most of the time I use Black and White for my walks around the cemeteries. Personally I think shades and contrasts make for a more interesting image there.
However, in some shots the details are cleaner and more obvious in color.
Each of these photographs is very detailed. It’s the nature of crowded old location.
I finished the images here using several different methods. Not something I like to do in color, there’s no consistency to the group.
In this case the images were completed over the course of a few weeks. Hot and time spent indoors finishing images with no thought as to when they would be published.
So I present a ‘hodge podge’ of photos from a days walk.
A marsh feeds this lagoon in the Magnolia Cemetery outside Charleston.
Magnolia started life as the Umbra plantation, became a park style cemetery in 1850 (with this lagoon), then the Civil War brought in hundreds of military casualties. Parts of Magnolia became a large southern military cemetery.
This is an image of an old southern cemetery that on the surface looks to be a simple ‘snap shot’ landscape. And that was the idea behind it. Basically an old style shot of head stones and graves.
These is a lot to see here so developing/finishing darkroom style was needed. I’m an old black and white photographer so I love doing this work.
The soft, almost gray look and feel is done with a Lightroom pre-set created and saved a few years ago.
Dodge and Burn, the old lighten and darken specific areas played a big part here. Bottom of image foreground was lightened.
Parts of the background were lightly burned to expose hidden/dark iron fences, head stones, and other small details.
When shooting color I rarely bother with small details like here. Monochrome images are based on light and shades so it makes a bigger difference. It’s just old school darkroom techniques.
Best viewed large.
Charleston, South Carolina.