View allAll Photos Tagged aspentrees
A clean and pristine spring morning at the park. Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming, USA, March 2024
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If you saw "The Lego Movie", now you have the song "Everything is Awesome" stuck in your head for the rest of the day. You're welcome! If you didn't see the movie, google the song so you can have it stuck in your head for the rest of the day!
341/365: Lost Among the Trees – Colorado
To keep with the theme of ‘Lost Among the Trees’ here is the Colorado version featuring the beautiful Aspen. I shoot this perspective everywhere I go and this one turned out great with the blue sky contrasting the white Aspen.
© Cathy Neth
Portfolio | thedook.com |
365 Photo Project | thedook.com/365
Hey Toto........We're not in Kansas anymore.....
My current situation.....not complaining one bit in the San Juan Mountains of southern Colorado. Autumn colors.....at their best!
Lots more to come.....
A grove of aspen trees in their golden autumn regalia form the backdrop for a trio of "dancing aspens", as they are known. Photographed near Telluride, CO.
Home of the University Fire Department, Police Department and Center for Health and Counseling. Built 1973. University of Alaska Fairbanks. Fall 2014. In a nice little stand of aspen trees.
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Fujichrome Sensia II ASA 200. Olympus XA2 Camera.
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"Stormy Divide..."
What an amazing morning this turned out to be. While standing along the rail at the famous Dallas Divide in southern Colorado, a quick snowsquall/rain/hail storm decided to sweep on through the mountains and over those of us photographing the scene. It was a very fast moving squall and it was easy to keep shooting through the brief wind and moisture falling on us. It was fun to share this moment with a few of my local photographer friends from northern Colorado This area is so popular in the fall with photographers, that it's important to arrive in the dark to have a place to set up. Somehow, on this day, their was not an overabundance of people, making the entire experience that much more enjoyable. While I do not generally divulge locations publicly, this is such an iconic spot, with no threat of being destroyed by people.
On this snowy Sunday just enjoying memories from one month ago. Hope everyone is enjoying thier weekend.
Layers of autumn....
We spent hours driving up and down roads in the southern San Juan mountains of Colorado this past week. The views were astounding at every turn....the light constantly changing.....the mood constantly changing.......This scene mesmerized me......I had to capture the beauty as best I could. This was very early in the morning just before too much light hit the foliage. The distant mountains had a blue, cool hue to them. You can see how the slopes and mountains dwarf the road below.
Ah the fall season is in full swing up in the mountains of Colorado and that usually brings out the best conditions to do astrophotography. The hazy conditions that have dominated the last couple months in Colorado let up enough to have a very clear view of the Milky Way. My good friend Chase and I went down to the Crested Butte area to do 36 hours of whirlwind fall photography. We arrived around midnight at Lake Irwin on Friday night and shot this incredible sky for about 2 hours before retiring to Hotel Ford Escape for a few hours to catch the sunrise on Ohio Pass. Whew! Now to repack, and head out again!
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I Think of Alpine Loop. I’ve had a chance to visit the Alpine Loop Scenic Backway in the Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest many times since I spent an afternoon soaking in views with a friend. This is truly a mountain and forest paradise and is only a short drive from the Sundance and Park City areas of Utah. This was my fourth time visiting the area, I believe! Anywho, I’d just finished exploring several national parks and monuments in southern Utah and was heading back to Salt Lake City for my flight back to Austin. I had the whole day to soak in views...and I most definitely did :-) The original image I captured with my Nikon D800E I uploaded here on Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/14723335@N05/41176334392/in/album-7...
For the digital painting, there were many aspects I worked on and practiced. The first was the trees. I’ve struggled with trees and painting them for a while. Well, other than some typical evergreens I’ve come across in my travels in the northern US and Canada. Here I had Autumn and its full colors on display. This section of the national forest covered mountainside after mountainside with the yellow hues of aspens (my favorite tree to stand under while watching the leaves shimmer with each passing breeze). I didn’t want to “cheat” on that and wanted to have a more accurate depiction. I found my answer watching Bob Ross paint trees with Autumn colors (www.youtube.com/watch?v=VAdMkf-AAPM). After watching it several times, I determined this setting seemed to best capture that brush stroke: Rich Oil Brush by Kyle, Blend, Scatter 186%, Tip Angle 0º. I used a Kyle’s Paintbox - French Sharp Block impressionist style brush for the ground under the aspen trees and mountainside. For the distant trees I used a Kyle’s Rakes - Zen Grind, a favorite of mine lately. I continued to get better (my impression at least) on making the blue skies seem more natural with streaks and other looks (www.creativebloq.com/advice/5-simple-tips-for-painting-be...). The last area I’ll discuss is clouds, a definite struggle these past few months. Then I discovered this video with cloud painting (www.youtube.com/watch?v=tN1J47FcNH8), and it all came together. There’s more I can practice on (and have been with other practice paintings).
In the center right foreground of the painting, you'll find that stick figure image of me setting up my Nikon SLR camera with my Cubbies hat on, loving my time exploring the mountains and forests of Utah :-)
Hey Toto........We're not in Kansas anymore.....
My current situation.....not complaining one bit in the San Juan Mountains of southern Colorado. Autumn colors.....at their best!
Lots more to come.....
Wow! Highest Position Explore #27 October 25,2013 Thank You!
www.davidrironsjrphotography.com
Well as I promised, here is a vertical pan of the grove of Aspen Trees I found on my three trips to Leavenworth, Washington. A fellow photographer friend of mine, Aaron Reed, taught me how to do this. I have been so inspired by his landscapes and abstracts, I had to find my own Aspen Grove and try it!
I probably burned up half a memory card trying to perfect this! I seemed to do a better job with this when I did vertical pans, turning my camera on it's side, rather than leaving my camera in it's normal position. I do have a horizontal picture on my website in the "Abstract" section...Link provided above.
The funny part about all of this is I was shooting across a major highway as semi truck and cars flew by me at over 60 miles per hour! It was cold and a little windy while I tried this. For best results, leave your camera on the tripod and pan down so that the tree trunks don't migrate in the shot. I have to confess that I did all of mine "Hand-Held" as I found using my tripod was cumbersome.
This is a single RAW exposure at about half a second. I used a smaller aperture to increase the exposure. I tried with longer exposures, but found that I got too much of the trees and not enough of the colorful foliage below. There are truly many ways to control your exposures, so I won't go into them. The above is what worked for me. I can't wait to print this large either on canvas or on metal! Considering I have three of them, they could look good together on a wall!
To all of my new contacts, thank you for adding me. The response over the past two days has been phenomenal and almost incomprehensible! Over 45K views yesterday! To everyone, thank you for your support, views, comments and fave. I truly appreciate them. Have a great weekend!
I own all original RAW and final processed images you see on my photostream. Please do not use them on blogs or websites without my permission. All images are available for sale or license through either Getty Images or myself through my website. If you see something here that is not on my website, let me know and I can put it on there. Thank you.
The fall aspen colors are off the charts right now in the Utah mountains. This photo is from my wife's birthday mountain bike ride, last weekend. With a little rain during the ride, we rode perfect, tacky dirt through the most beautiful, golden aspen groves. I love Utah!
This photo appeared in Flickr Explore on September 30th, 2025.
Prime Elk viewing spot. Got there early to secure a parking space. Tick Tick Tick....absolutely no Elk showed up this evening! Oh but the clouds did, and that gorgeous late afternoon light! The clouds were totally amazing all day.
The peaks in the distance are Mount Chapin, Mount Chiquita, and Ypsilon Mountain.
Rocky Mountain National Park. Colorado
This one if from the archives Adam Potts and I took an unforgettable trip to the Eastern Sierras that culminated in one of the best sunsets at Bonsai Rock I have ever seen. This particular evening, we wondered up this canyon to explore this grove that kept going up the entire mountain side. We stayed until sunset, then wondered back to the car in the dark. Great times, great memories and some great photo opportunities!
This image was honored with an AWARD from the Mayslake Nature Study and Photography Club. Connect with me on Facebook and Hitzeman Photography
My favorite dirt road during my favorite time of year. This is Buford Road near New Castle and Meeker, Colorado during the fall color season.
Aspens are starting to show off their fall colors on the edge of Oregon's Diamond Lake, as the last vestige of morning fog clings to the water's surface.
A bull moose eats from Oxbow Bend as he's reflected with fall colors in the water in Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming.
to perceive👀 is to exist.to exist👽 is to feel.to feel😊 is to live.to live is what this existence is all about.
photo captured standing on a mountain in a forest looking out at the Pacific Ocean – a feeling of such exhilaration hearing the ocean, smelling the mist, touching the trees, seeing the beauty all around me – a happy sensory overload.
location details: Siuslaw National Forest – Cape Perpetua Scenic Area – Yachats, Oregon.
all Oregon landscape photography available for purchase in print.
📷EXIF
1/100 second
f/8
ISO 100
24mm
2018.05.16
⚙Gear
Nikon D810
Nikkor 14-24mm (f/2.8)
LEE Filters Circular Polarizer
ProMaster XC525
© Cathy Neth #beEpic
Portfolio | thedook.com |
365 Photo Project | thedook.com/365 |
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In Explore November 29, 2023
The yellow trees are quaking aspen (Populus tremuloides). Quaking aspen are Colorado's only widespread, native, deciduous tree and can be found from 6,500 to 11,500 feet in elevation, particularly on the West Slope. The aspen's delicate leaves and vibrant fall color often are displayed as a symbol of Colorado itself.
From Wikipedia:
Rio Grande National Forest is a 1.86 million-acre (7,530 km2) U.S. National Forest located in southwestern Colorado. The forest encompasses the San Luis Valley, which is the world's largest agricultural alpine valley, as well as one of the world's largest high deserts located around mountains. The Rio Grande river rises in the forest, and the Continental Divide runs along most of its western border.