Landscapes - Jordan

I went up to the Mt. Baker Ski Area for my pictures. I love the snow and the mountains, so I figured it would be the perfect spot. (I might also include more than two photos. I have a lot of landscape shots from other places, and no where else to show them off, lol.)
This first photo is shot at F/5.0 1/2000 and ISO 64. I don't remember the focal length of the lens. But it was in the 20s, I think.
F6.3, 1/2000 ISO 64 and this was shot at 50mm. So, the biggest critique that I have with my photos, and that I will always have with my photos, is that I can never tell if they are too dark. What looks fine to me, might actually be too dark. Especially when I just yank it straight from my camera and don't run it through Lightroom or something like that. Also, and maybe you'd be able to help answer this question for me, Professor; but how do you take photos with sunglasses? I had to wear them up on Mt. Baker because otherwise it would have been obscenely bright, but I felt like I couldn't take pictures with them on. But then I'd take them off, I would have to use the viewfinder. Since I had to use the viewfinder, I couldn't get the camera as low as I would have liked for other photos I took. So, what do? Another critique that I have, is that I very much like cool colors in my photography. But in winter shots like this, the photos and be a little too cool. It's also something that I've noticed in photos during cloudy days. Auto white balance always looks to yellow to me, but that is probably closer to what the thing I'm taking the picture of probably looks like. I'm not sure if this is just personal taste or not, though.

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