View allAll Photos Tagged haystackrock
French Impressionist painter Claude Monet used to take a subject -- a church facade, a water-lily pond, haystacks -- and paint them in different light at different times of day as a study in light. I was thinking of him as I took these images recently at the Oregon coast. I was thinking about how he might handle this scene as one of his "studies." So I'd like to pay homage to Claude, one of my favorites, by trying my hand at a study of light at this scene in Cannon Beach, Oregon. This is of Haystack Rock at sunrise.
Black Oystercatcher Family
Haystack Rock
Cannon Beach, Oregon
07/08/2013
While junior looks for a way back under the protection of mom's wing, his two siblings were hiding underneath taking up all the space.
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I wasn't sure I'd ever see clear skies (well at least mostly clear) on the Oregon Coast. This is a shot I've been wanting for awhile. I waited in the cold to get it
Nikon D90
Tokina 11-16 at 12mm
ISO 3200
f/2.8
75 Second Exposure
Chief Kiwanda Rock and Cape Kiwanda are silhouetted during a low tide sunset off the shore of Pacific City, Oregon.
It was a gorgeous night, and a nice low tide after a very high tide.Perfect sunset material!
I think this image gets the honor of being the first pinhole image I made in the new year. We headed west to watch the sun set for the first time in 2015, and standing out on the windswept westward reaches of Cape Kiwanda I got the new year started with my Innova 6x9. I set a goal for myself this year to commit to more lensless photography and to not just continuing to explore area I am familiar with but to find those boundaries and venture forth beyond them, into brave new pinhole territory... well new for me at least.
Cannon Beach Oregon
Pentax 645Nii, 35mm SMC lens, Fuji Pro400H film
31 secs, f4.5. Straight from the scanner.
The beach is being illuminated by campfires and hotel lights along the beach. Mostly campfires.
This is still my most favorite beach in the world, and I've seen quite a few. Can't really swim in the sea, but the beach itself is incredible. And you can legally build campfires and make Smores :-)
Anemones at low tide at Cannon Beach, Oregon. The area around Haystack Rock at Cannon Beach is considered a Marine Garden because the Tidepools are so rich with life, both aquatic with the attendant high bird population.
Historically, anemones have been considered part of the animal world, but recent studies show that they have genetic components of plant life, also!
Weird , huh! Part animal, part plant!
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Haystack Rock forms a silhouette on Cannon Beach shortly after sunset.
All rights reserved. Protected with PIXSY.
It's break time at work! I'll add a real description later. =]
25 sec
F/13
ISO100
16mm (Canon EF-S 10-22mm) No polarizer (was in a rush, and had it off to use the ND110 instead)
After a day to restore body and bike, 63-mile ride from Bandon to Gold Beach. A beautiful day along the coast. Caught up with fellow cyclists that I met in Pacific City.
Left Seaside for Tillamook, today. Started out nice and sunny, but ended up in a torrential storm, 25 mph headwind, and a flat 5 miles from my destination!
Soaked and cold. Definitely my worst day so far.
After a day to restore body and bike, 63-mile ride from Bandon to Gold Beach. A beautiful day along the coast. Caught up with fellow cyclists that I met in Pacific City.
Bandon Beach
After a day to restore body and bike, 63-mile ride from Bandon to Gold Beach. A beautiful day along the coast. Caught up with fellow cyclists that I met in Pacific City.
When is the time to shoot vertical? Right after the horizontal.
Info about this location
This picture was taken at Cannon Beach, OR. More Info : en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haystack_Rock
Info about this photo:
This photo was taken with 11-16mm Tokina Lens. It was taken in RAW format and has been post processed with PS CC.
Exif Info : f16 - 1s - 18mm - ISO 200
Best viewed on black. Press L to view on black Press F to fave it.
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"Come live with me and be my love, And we will all the pleasures prove, That valleys, groves, hills, and fields, Woods, or steepy mountain yields." - Christopher Marlowe
I decided it was worth waiting to see what would happen when the sun sank onto the horizon -- it could get swallowed up by the marine layer, in which case it would mean fizzle, or it could color the thin layer of haze and clouds. As you can see, I got lucky. Indian Beach sunset at Ecola State Park, Oregon Coast.