Long exposure shot at night. That's the moon light from the left, and camp fire that lid the left portion of the photo. It reminds me of the way Dragonstone was described in the books.



In reality, it was a dark night with only the moon light and tungsten lighting from the beach front establishments. The "mist" were actually the ebb and flow of the tides washing over the rocks and lit only by the moon under a long exposure. Even at the camera's maximum time setting, (I didn't bring my remote trigger for bulb setting), I still have to up the ISO to 400. I thought it was a flop and moved on to other locations, and discover I had a gem later, much later, on my desktop.



This was shot on my beloved 20D, my first digital camera. Amazing little 8mp camera.



The goal was to achieve a photo-realistic painting rather than photographing reality. This is done by series of steps from Camera Raw processing, then Smart Sharpening filter techniques to bring out nuance details out and softening the edges just enough to look like a painting.