At night, the rules change. In daylight, the world is already fully visible, and the photographer’s job is mostly editing. Moving closer or farther, shifting the frame, zooming in and out, deciding what to exclude so the subject can stand out. But at night, the landscape isn’t presenting itself all at once. It’s reduced to silhouette and suggestion, pitch black forms waiting in the dark. That’s where a different kind of freedom opens up. I’m not only choosing composition. I’m choosing revelation. I decide what the viewer gets to see, what stays hidden, and what carries the emotional weight. With light in my hand, I can sculpt the scene the way a painter shapes a canvas, one intentional highlight at a time.