View allAll Photos Tagged bryce
I love 4x5 cameras but love a wider format, so I crop my exposes in PS CC
Tachihara 4x5
Ilford 4x5 HP5@400 cropped with 16x9 ratio
Schneider 90mm
Pentax Spotmeter
F64 3 Seconds
Ilfasol 20c at 5mins
Epson v800
You have to get up bright and early, before sunrise in order to catch the best images at Bryce.
I had Magnachrome turn this into a stunning 11X14 inch metal print. This thing is just awesome.
This picture is S.O.O.P!
Straight Out Of Photoshop CS5 - Because I care.
If I took your picture and gave you a little card, please contact me and I will get the image to you. No charge.
If you have to use this picture to decorate your hovel, or to hide some holes in your walls then don't forget who created it.
If you use any of my images commercially without permission, pray our trails never cross.
Blogers are welcome to post my images with credit. I like the publicity.
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I have two IDs on FlickR
For my general photography
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Last summer i visited this amazing np with its indescribably nature. I often think back to that time.
Bryce Zion Campground, north of Glendale, Utah
Best viewed in Lightbox, i.e., click on the expand arrows at upper right.
This is just off US Highway 89, about halfway between Zion and Bryce Canyon National Parks. I'd passed by here once before in the winter of 2020, but it was dark and in the middle of a snowstorm as I made my way to my motel in Panguitch. I had no idea this little slice of Bryce was here. As this was near the end of my trip there would be no return to the actual Bryce this time as I'd run out of it--time, that is.
As one might guess owing to the snow, it was cold this day. The previous day had been unbelievably warm as I toured Zion, but that was the last nice day of my trip, which was just as well as I had to be back in Topeka in two days for the Kansas Silent Film Festival. Almost 1,200 miles lay ahead of me, and since I always drive well under the speed limit, I was really pressed. I only stopped twice for photos after this--once briefly at Red Canyon (just off US-89 near Bryce), and at Mt. Logan in Western Colorado just off I-70 (see: www.flickr.com/photos/80014607@N05/53333075004/in/datepos... ). There would be no little detours for me. Another words, from here it was basically a long cold, boring slog. But though I hate that kind of driving, I don't mean to complain. After all, I had a month of very non-boring drives before this coda.
This is a Pano combining three photos taken with my Nikon D810.
The extraordinary geology of Bryce Canyon National Park, a land of “hoodoos” or rock pillars, which have been carved over the millennia by wind, rain, ice and snow to form the incredible spectacle they are today. This is taken from Sunset Point.
Au pays des HOODOOS
BRYCE CANYON (du charpentier Ebenezer Bryce)
C’est un immense amphithéâtre composé d’une forêt de pierres aux silhouettes ocre et rose. Ces formations rocheuses s'élevant de terre tels des stalactites rougeâtres sont appelées des Hoodoos, ou Cheminées de Fée. l'érosion des cycles répétés du gel et du dégel a façonné les roches dans le plateau du « Grand escalier » prenant naissance au Grand Canyon.
Décrété National Monument en 1923 et National Park en 1928, le parc est situé entre 2400 et 2740 m. Il est traversé d'une route panoramique d'une trentaine de kilomètres et s’étend sur 145 km2. Bryce Canyon est un véritable paradis pour les visiteurs et les photographes.
It is an immense amphitheater composed of a forest of stones with ocher and pink silhouettes. These rock formations rising from the ground like reddish stalactites are called Hoodoos, or Fairy Chimneys. The erosion of repeated cycles of freezing and thawing shaped the rocks in the plateau of the "Grand Staircase" originating in the Grand Canyon.
Decreted National Monument in 1923 and National Park in 1928, the park is located between 2400 and 2740 m. It is crossed by a panoramic road of about thirty kilometers and extends over 145 km2. Bryce Canyon is a true paradise for visitors and photographers.
I was hoping for some classic Bryce morning light to make the orange rock formations light up, but ... it just doesn't happen every day. Instead, there was a high overcast for the first hour after dawn and when the sun did shine through, it created a nice soft illumination, but not too much glowing color.
I wouldn't have picked this one for Explore, but there it is at #270 on 5-30-11.
Bryce Canyon is a national treasure. This is Bryce Point.
utah.com/bryce-canyon-national-park
By the time we arrived in Bryce, the road was closed after Bryce Point due to winter conditions. This same morning there was a blizzard making it impossible to see much, and this continued through most of the day. After cooling my heels at Ruby's, late in the afternoon I saw some blue sky. So I grabbed my camera and headed out on the shuttle bus.
Got back to Ruby's on the last shuttle, just in time to go out for dinner.
Bryce Canyon National Park entrance area with moon on plain blue sky. Photographed December last year.
This is from my trip to Bryce. Yes, snow in April. Makes me think of what's to come here soon and I'm not thrilled!!! One of the most amazing places to see and I will definitely go back and spend more time there. I will be out most of the day but will get to you all this evening.
Bryce Canyon, UT, USA
This shot was taken further north on the rim from the previous shot. The clouds really helped show off the sunrise colours.
Check out the rest of the photos from the trip here.