Not long ago I decided that I wanted to catch a sunrise from one of my favorite locations on the Blue Ridge Parkway, Black Balsam Mountain Overlook. In spite of really being conscientious about arriving on time, I was delayed in my departure from Asheville; and as I was going down the Parkway as quickly as the speed limit would allow, I realized that I was going to fall short in my arrival. Nothing to do but go to Plan B. Knowing the road intimately was certainly a boon because I was able to stop several miles short of my destination and use Looking Glass Rock as a foreground element while the color deepened and the thin mists floated lazily through the valleys below. Scouting your locations ahead of time and becoming intimate with their possibilities is sometimes the difference between salvaging a wonderful experience from the jaws of “too late.” Since the layers of color were stacked vertically, it was a vertical composition that appealed to me, but extraneous elements in the visual field dictated a focal length of 75mm – the near end of short telephoto. An aperture of f/20 provided depth-of-field; and a shutter speed of 0.6 second at ISO 100 gave me a slightly darker-than-medium exposure which I further darkened in post-processing in order to bring the scene closer to the way my eyes experienced it.