Friday, February 24, 2012

Favorite FlickR Fotos for Friday 2/24/2012


I spent last weekend in Death Valley National Park. I highly recommend visiting this treasure and capturing your own images. A weekend is not enough time to see everything but you can visit some of the more iconic locations. I arrived Friday afternoon, scouted around a bit, and then went out to Badwater Basin for sunset. In my last blog I shared some of the inspirational Death Valley pictures I found on FlickR and knowing that I was limited to two sunsets and two sunrises, I drew up a short list of places I wanted to try to visit. Badwater Basin was first on my list. 



This image from Badwater Basin with the polygon shaped salt residue in the foreground and the setting sun kissing the Black Mountains is called  "Black Mountain Glow". I spent the first few days of this week processing images from the trip (you can see some of the results at my website) before getting back to cruising FlickR looking for interesting Photographs.

So over the last couple of days I poked around on FlickR and found the following 5 images:

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Favorite Death Valley FlickR Fotos 2012


I am going to Death Valley National Park for the first time. As is true for many photographers, photographing Death Valley is on my bucket list. I have been doing some research including reading "The Photographers Guide to Death Valley" by Shellye Poster, two of the Photograph America newsletters (#001 and #104) from Robert Hitchman and visiting the NPS Death Valley National Park website. While researching where to go, what to shoot, time of day, etc. I searched FlickR for images.

There are a lot of great Death Valley images on FlickR. The ones I am referencing here are 10 of the favorites I found while searching recently:












I hope you find these photos as inspiring. I did.

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Monday, February 13, 2012

LowePro Sunset

Recently, I have been exploring the Santa Clarita valley and nearby areas for locations to shoot sunrises or sunsets. The Santa Clarita valley is north of Los Angeles and is the location of the city of Santa Clarita, the 4th largest city in Los Angeles county. The Santa Clara river, for which the city and valley are named flows west from the San Gabriel mountains meeting the Pacific ocean near Ventura, California.

The sunrises and sunsets can be spectacular when you have clouds move in from the west (the typical storm pattern) into the valley. With the last un-channeled river in southern California running through the valley, one would think there would be many opportunities for great images. But the city of Santa Clarita alone has over 100,000 residents and all of these people need infrastructure: roads and freeways, gas stations and markets, movie theaters and amusement parks, etc. So finding a location that favors natural elements over man made ones is difficult.

LowePro Sunset
In trying to avoid scenes with roads, markets, cars and the like, I have been searching for locations above the valley floor. Central Park, sort of located "centrally" hence the name, is the largest recreation area within the city boundaries and supports many activities. It is the location of many cross country running meets because it has flat areas and hilly areas making for interesting course layouts. Adjacent to the park is privately owned land that overlooks the Santa Clara river. In hunting for locations, I had seen these hills and wondered how to access them. Using google maps, I found a way to access the private land using part of the cross country course that originates in Central Park.

The sunset on the evening of February 11th, 2012 looked promising and I decided to try to shoot the sunset from the private land. I grabbed my camera bag and rain gear (it spit for a minute but rain was never an issue) and hiked south from Central Park. The good news is that when I finally got on the top of the right hill, I was rewarded with the view that I wanted. The bad news was that this was the private land I had been seeking but it had been graded and stripped of vegetation in preparation for building houses. I am not sure when the grading occurred (it was likely before the current housing bust) but the land is slowly recovering. At some point the housing market will recover and the owner will build out the houses with the side affect that the views from these hills looking out across the valley will be limited to a few people. Because the land had been graded and the scrub brush is slowly recovering, there was not anything interesting to use in the foreground so I improvised by using my camera bag.

In the meantime, I was there, set the aperture at f/8 and captured a few images. I had been in this general area one other time and did not relish hiking out in the dark so on that occasion, I left when there was still some light and as a consequence I missed it when the sunset "exploded". This time I brought a flashlight and waited but the sky never went boom. It was still very nice.

Image particulars: Canon 5D MKII, EF 16-35mm/f2.8L II lens at 16mm and f/8, .6 sec, ISO 100 using a Kirk BH-3 ball head on a Gitzo GT2541 tripod.

The image, LowePro Sunset and others are available at my website.



Saturday, February 11, 2012

Look at the Trees

There are a lot of things to keep in mind when trying to take a memorable photograph. Obviously, you need to consider exposure. An incorrectly exposed image won't convey the story. But when  you think about exposure you can't consider it alone because exposure affects the depth of field which in turn affects the composition. So start with composing the image and let that determine the exposure. With that in mind, I frame the elements that I see in front of me. What is the "message"? What am I seeing that I want the viewer to see and then how do I put the pieces together to capture that.

Ok...you see some elements and their relationship. These elements are things like foreground objects to draw in the viewer eyes, mid-ground elements that might be the main subject and then elements at other points that frame the image. You set up your tripod and camera, "place" the elements in the frame, decide on the depth of field to emphasize (or not) some elements, set the exposure and click away. You look at the back of the camera and the histogram looks good. Success!

Then you get home and look at the image on your computer and you notice something. Things don't look right. Oh cr@p! You sit there thinking...damn, I thought I leveled the camera/tripod. Oh well, Lightroom/Photoshop to the rescue! Simply use the cropping/straightening tool to find a level line, adjust the image, crop it so it's level and done. But then you look at those results and something still doesn't look right. What's wrong...hmmm...the trees don't look right. Why are the trees leaning left? Don't trees grow straight up (they do except under certain conditions)? Why are the trees leaning left...why are the trees leaning left...well you cropped the image...hmmm.

Here is the image that caused me to write this blog. 

I (essentially) did what is described above and found the image did not look right after "straightening". Why...because I did remember to level the camera and tripod when I composed the image. The original image is correct and the ground in the background is slanted. Bear in mind that with a wide angle lens, objects on the edges of the image will keystone so you need to look at elements in the middle of the image. And the trees in the middle are upright.

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Friday, February 10, 2012

Favorite FlickR Fotos for Friday 2/10/2012


If you are following my blog then you know that I regularly cruise through photographs on FlickR looking for ones I like. There are a lot of great images on FlickR. Just finding the photographs is enjoyable.

I am currently following about 25 photographers on FlickR but I don't limit my hunting to just that group. I cruise through various group pools like Best of U.S. National Parks (a group which I help moderate), California Landscape PhotographerUtah Landscapes and Singh Ray Filters (I have almost 70 groups in the list I currently follow) and peruse the photographs. When I find a photograph I like I make them a "favorite" so I can go back and study them to either understand what the photographer did to capture the moment or to understand why the image works. Sometimes out of this, I find interesting photographers and I add them as contacts so I can regularly go look at what they produce.

So out of the gabazillion photographers on FlickR I am only following about 25 of them. Does that mean I think they are the 25 best photographers on FlickR? Not at all. There are lots of great photographs posted everyday and there are many, many great photographers but there is only 1 of me and I do need to make a living. So the 25 photographers is what I can manage and the 5 images I am linking to here are only 5 out of the many I found and really liked.

Friday, February 3, 2012

Favorite FlickR Fotos for Friday 2/3/2012

I try to regularly cruise through photographs on FlickR looking for ones I like. I don't use "Explore" because frankly, I don't understand it. Every time I have bothered to wander through the explore images (on each day, there are 500 of them) I find a lot of pictures of what I can only describe as dolls that have been posed, photographed and photoshopped or created entirely in software. And I encounter this every time I have bothered to cruise the "Explore" images. Why those image are interesting is beyond me. As far as I'm concerned they are not images and are a waste of disk storage.

Anyway, there are a lot of great images on FlickR. I like finding them and looking at them. Sometimes I make them favorites so I can go back and look and study them to either understand what the photographer did to capture the moment or to understand why the image works. Sometimes out of this, I find interesting photographers and I add them as contacts so I can regularly go look at what they produce.

So here are 5 images I found this week on FlickR:

Sandstorm by Alpenglowimages

San Francisco Bay Bridge, Night by Robin Black Photography

Playing with water by jdcmjb

Davenport Beach by Lucas Wenger Photography

Borrego Badlands at Night by Jeffrey Sullivan

I hope you enjoy these photos as much as I do.