Sorry, you did not see it. Nebulusity can best be seen fanning south off the star Merope in the "bowl" of the dipper asterism that the brightest stars of M45 form. Nebulosity can sometimes also be seen as a circular patch surrounding the star Maia (but I have never seen it). If you see circular patches surrounding all of the bright stars, you are not seeing true nebulosity. Instead, you are seeing simple light scatter. Every bright star in the sky is surrounded by this.
For many years I had trouble spotting nebulosity in M45. Finnally, last year I succeeding in spotting the nebulosity that fans off of Merope. Now it has become rather easy for me to spot. It looks like a very faint patch of light several arcminutes across with Merope on the northern edge.
Here is an image:
As you can see, a the brightest star at the bottom, Merope, has a substantial reflection nebula running off to the south of it. This is the Merope nebula I have been speaking of.
The brightest star at the top of the bowl is Maia. As you can see, the nebulosity surrounding Maia is much less substantial than the Merope nebula. If you can't see the Merope Nebula, you will not be able to see the Maia nebula. Perhaps some of the other reflection nebulae in the Pleiades could be spotted under ultra-dark desert skies.
One final note: These are REFLECTION nebulae! Do not use nebula filters on these. Reflection nebulae shine with all wavelengths, just like the sun, stars, galaxies, and LIGHT POLLUTION. Thus, inserting a LPR filter is the same thing as inserting an Anti-reflection nebula filter. You gotta go for these suckers in unfiltered light. That in turn means you must be at a dark site.