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Evening Light

Evening Light

Photography is all about the light. In this image, the low, evening light skims across the surface of the ice, showing every bump and ripple. Instead of blasting into the tree as the early afternoon sun would do, the softer light from the sun on the horizon gently brings out the texture in the bark. Every square inch of the image is packed with detail, helping to create an inviting feeling rather than just being a pretty picture. It is the quality of light that transforms an otherwise ordinary scene into an extraordinary photograph.

Coastal Fog

Coastal Fog

I mentioned in an earlier post about my visit to the Oregon Coast, and that we were socked in all week with the marine layer. At first I was disappointed, but realizing that it wasn’t going away, I began photographing it. This is an image that would not have existed without the fog. I love the depth, softness and mystery created by the mist. As I tell my students, there is always something to photograph. We just need to open our eyes and be observant. Having a positive attitude always helps as well. As was the case here, until I decided that even though it was not what I had originally expected, there was beauty here to be captured, I didn’t find it. Attitude, vision and mastery of equipment and technique make all the difference.

Multnomah Falls

Multnomah Falls

The other day I was showing my students a Dewitt Jones video on creativity. He talked about shooting Yosemite Falls, and it brought back memories of when I was at Multnomah Falls in Oregon. I started by shooting the entire falls, very postcardish. Interesting, but not very creative. I felt like it was nothing special. Anybody could do that. So I started looking for what was really interesting, as Dewitt Jones would say, “another right answer.” I found just a small section of the whole image that to me made a much bigger statement. The sharp, crisp foreground placed against the flowing water of the upper falls was wonderful! It had depth. It had mood. It had feeling. It was different.

Against The Shadows

Against The Shadows

If you were to take 100 photographers to the same location at the same time, they would come up with 100 different images. We all have our own unique way of seeing and creating photographs. That is also what keeps us improving and evolving. At least for me that is true. I admire photographers who work in different styles than I do. I can understand and enjoy their images but no matter how hard I try, I cannot create photographs like they do. The same is true, I believe, for each of us.

This particular image is a perfect example of what I am trying to say. I was out one fall morning in Jackson Hole, Wyoming with a group of photographers. Steve Winslow was leading the excursion and had been to this very location many times before. After a wonderful morning of photographing, we went to breakfast then went our separate ways. Several months later I met up with Steve at a convention where I had entered this image in competition. He asked me where I had taken the photo. He seemed surprised when I told him that it was that morning in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, and he was there. He had not seen this image before, I believe, because we have different visions. Not better or worse, just different. If we truly put our hearts into our work then we will create meaningful images that are uniquely our own.

Evening Waves

Evening Waves, Ecola State Park, Oregon

There is not much better than an evening stroll on the beach with the one you love! It’s even better when you have a camera to capture the light skimming across the waves as they crest then crash into the shore. It was a beautiful, cool evening near Cannon Beach where I was captivated by the waves. Christeena and I were out shooting together and having a great time. I kept coming back to the waves. As the sun lowered in the western sky, it just kept getting better and better. Timing the waves to get the perfect lines leading to the rock formations was critical, and challenging. Waiting and watching, that is the name of the game so often in landscape photography. That is the beauty of it!

I love being in the outdoors. I could wait for hours watching, feeling, hearing, smelling. I get all of my senses involved when I am out with my camera and try to capture images with feeling. When successful, the viewer becomes totally engaged in the image. They can see what I see, hear what I hear and feel what I feel. That is my goal. Not always am I successful. When I am,though, it makes all of the effort worthwhile. It is as though I am able to share a piece of my soul with the world.

Technical data: Canon 5D, 70-200 f/2.8L @ 165mm f/8, 1/60 sec., always on a tripod!

Sunset, Stanley Lake

Sunset, Stanley Lake

Sunset, Stanley Lake is one of the first really colorful images that I have had success with. I grew up as a black and white photographer. I loved shooting large format black and white film. I developed my own film, printed my own images. The darkroom was my home. I studied Ansel Adams Zone System and felt like I had really mastered the art of black and white. The science behind it was a part of me. I no longer had to think about it, but could let the art in me come out because I knew exactly how to achieve the desired result.

Then came digital. I saw the advantages of digital first in my commercial work, so I jumped in, thinking all along that I would hang on to film for all of my personal work. It didn’t happen that way. I learned to control digital photography, not let it control me. I learned what it could and could not do. I began exploring color. That same love affair that I had initially with film was beginning to take shape with me and digital photography. In almost all of my early color work I used a very simple color palette, many times still monochromatic. That is the way I see. Then on one trip to Stanley Lake with my family, I found this image.

I had been out fishing and arrived back at camp just in time for sunset. I grabbed my camera and tripod and started walking. No more than thirty yards from our campsite I found this marshy area near the outlet. The sun had set just 10 minutes earlier and there was a haze in the sky that I later learned was caused by a wildfire that had started earlier in the day. I quickly set up and carefully composed and metered the scene. The light beautifully illuminated the haze and reflected in the water in the foreground, creating very strong color contrast in the image. The green grasses and bushes were illuminate by a wide open sky and seemed to glow. I was captivated not so much by the composition, but by the color. This was very different for me. It was an incredible feeling. I saw and felt something that I had rarely seen or felt before, and I was hooked.

I still do quite a bit of black and white work, but have now added color to my working palette. Photography for me is a journey, one that I very much enjoy. I will continue to evolve, change and grow, and as I do I will continue to share what I learn with any who wish to ride along with me!

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