![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjx60Qwnl8bXdFYJZ39ZH0g1nSMkm1QUiMAEYPwmFYn8sbCL8DIEjdWjXcJq4TZuT_9z490yFqYVY_Vxt8udX8IaqxE45dJTgRqpXOkng9J89I84Ge0aMeVrdRnAgJ0Fst1z0UvVrWA/s400/Obstacle---small.jpg)
Earlier this week I was visiting a friend who lives in an old farmhouse in between some wide open fields in Southampton. When I was about to leave at around four o'clock, I looked out the window and was awestruck by the sky. Behind her house the sun was already sinking low, but shooting yet another sunset didn't interest me. So I swiveled around and peered out the front window where I saw the clear, cold light bouncing off a farm structure across the way.
Wrapping myself in my down coat, I pulled my hood on, headed outside, and trod across the frozen earth. When I got within shooting range, I peered through the lens and realized there was a wire fence between me and the image I had envisioned.
Hmmm....what to do? I thought for a few moments. I couldn't remove the obstacle, but perhaps I could use it to enhance the composition somehow. Zooming in closer, I threw the wire out-of-focus and moved to the left. I had created a frame within a frame and transformed the fence into an element that added interest to the image.
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