View allAll Photos Tagged aspentrees
©2021 John C. Mejia, All rights reserved This is a copyrighted image with all rights reserved. Do NOT use this image on any website, blog, Facebook, Twitter or ANY other type of social media without my explicit written permission. Contact me...and let's talk. I'm a reasonable person.
Fall colors, a barn, and Mt. Adams...for what more could one ask, eh?!
If it were a perfect world, I would gladly leave my normally unobtrusive watermark off in a corner. But sadly, it is not. And so I am forced to now place it front & center to discourage dishonest people from image theft and cropping watermarks. My apologies to image loving fans everywhere...I trust you will understand. Help fight this by reporting such abuses immediately!
© Lindbloom Photography
This is one of my favorite portrait locations. I grabbed this image while I was waiting for a client to arrive for their session.
© Lindbloom Photography
A fall panorama of Gilman, Colorado. Gilman is an abandoned mining town just south of Minturn, Colorado. The aspen trees on this hillside put on a spectacular show every year.
near aspen, colorado
1976
aspen trees
part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf
© the Nick DeWolf Foundation
Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com
All images are the property of ARDATH'S ARTISTIC ENTERPRISES© and ARDATH WINTEROWD PHOTOGRAPHS©
Using these images without permission is in violation of international copyright laws (633/41 DPR19/78-Disg 154/97-L.248/2000)
All of my photographs are Copyrighted and All Rights Reserved. They may not be used or reproduced publicly in any way without my written permission.
Eastern Sierra Nevada Mountains, CA, USA
Nikon F6
Nikkor 24-120mm f/4 G ED VR
Ilford Delta 100
Developed and scanned at Northcoast Photographic Services, Carlsbad, CA
Aspen trees on the Bill Williams Mountain road. Williams district. 10-17-14. Photo by KarreJo Santana. Williams district. Credit the U.S. Forest Service, Southwestern Region, Kaibab National Forest.
After our Sunday drive to Clearmont and Ucross, on Monday afternoon we went in the opposite direction - west up through Ranchester and Dayton - and up into the Big Horns - to see if there were any aspens and any fall color. It's October in the Big Horns so - there was not much. A handful of aspens were spotted, ant this batch, nestled down in a little draw below the road - were about the only color we found.
How is that for an artistic title?
I had these little folks a few years ago, but Tony has inspired me to bring them back out. Thanks, Tony!
June Lake Loop,
Eastern Sierra Nevada Mountains, CA, USA
Nikon F6
Nikkor 24-120mm f/4 G ED VR
Fujichrome Velvia 50
Developed and scanned at Northcoast Photographic Services, Carlsbad, CA
HDR of Telluride Valley, taken at the peak of the fall season. Amazing aspens and mountain colors, although I did take some liberty to move this fantastic cloud down a bit. I redid this photo with some masking in of the original image, getting some of the original view back.
October 20, 2016. ©Copyright 2016 Karlton Huber Photography - all rights reserved.
This pretty much says autumn!
Fall is coming late to Salt Lake City. I found these aspen leaves near the top of Millcreek Canyon. The leaves have not yet begun to change colors lower in the canyon.
Photographed on a stormy fall evening near Crested Butte, Colorado.
Prints available on my website www.bethmccarleyphoto.com
Okay, so lately I have tried to keep my Flickr account separate from my side photography business by only posting landscapes, but this was just too cute not to post! This was taken the same day I took the sunrise shots at Emerald Bay...fun day : )
This is a single RAW image edited in Lightroom 4.
October 4, 2016. ©Copyright 2016 Karlton Huber Photography - all rights reserved.
I created this image in a location that I visit every year during the fall color season. Oddly (or thankfully), I have never noticed this composition before. Maybe it's the light, maybe the trees are a little taller or maybe I just never have stood at this exact angle.
Lately, I have begun to notice that the more photographs I make the more I realize that seeing photographically requires a great deal of dedication, practice and study. Stronger compositions require a better or enhanced creative vision which in turn requires one to slow down and apply what one has learned. Practice, play and take risks.
I was initially attracted to these backit aspens and their wonderful golden illumination. I also found the uniformity of their shape interesting and pleasing as well. The sky was cloudless and boring so I wanted to fill the frame with the trees. While moving about trying to work out a desirable composition I noticed the notch in the trees and how it sort of inversely mimicked the distant mountain peak in the background. Once again I worked to reposition my tripod, this time with a better grasp of what I had in front of me and what I wanted the photograph to look like. I studied various focal lengths before settling on this composition. This is where I noticed how the trees and mountain worked together to create what looked like an arrowhead hence the title.