Here's another shot from Muddus National Park.
SK35mm, f/16 and tilt, Leaf Aptus 75, Linhof Techno. Grad filter to control the bright sky.
I got to use my new Lee Sev5en grad filters, really small and compact, and does work with the SK35 within useful shift ranges.
Tilt is not so often needed for wides, but sometimes it is, like here with a low camera position and high horizon. Still f/16 was required to get a wedge covering the treetops, but to get the foreground within DoF without tilt I would have had to use f/22 or smaller.
As usual I made the LCC with the grad still on so I cancelled it out in post-processing and applied new light tonemapping (which includes a virtual grad), ie the grad filter is only used for getting a better exposure in the field. Naturally the dark treetops become a bit noiser as they are under the dark part of the grad filter, but the foreground has excellent signal/noise ratio. As the trees have finer "random" details and kept quite dark noise is less disturbing there, so I find that using grads work well in most cases to get nice single-shot exposures in difficult light conditions.