View allAll Photos Tagged haystackrock
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.
Pacific City to Newport. 50 miles with one grueling painful climb due to a missed turn. But a wonderful sunny day otherwise.
Curiosity and creativity... two of the things I plan to discuss tonight during my talk at the PCC Cascade Arts Center tonight as part of their Portland Photo Month Speaker series. I have been trying to put together a speech that is not just new for everyone that may attend but for myself as well. I have been mulling what the internal forces are that push (or pull) me in my photography and how I think about those things. It is often a challenge to do so, think about and define those things. For me, my approach has become such an intuitive thing that I don't need to understand my "why's" in order to do what I do as a photographer. Nonetheless I think it is important to think about these things and, to an extent, understand them. Knowing the forces that drive us is an important part of helping insure that they are maintained and promoted. Or at least I think so.
So, if you have a few hours open tonight with your Friday evening, come hang out and hear what I have figured out to say. I go on at 7:30 but if you want to get there early enough, two other great Portland photographers: Katharine Jacobs and Blue Mitchell will be speaking before me. I'll post the details below.
Linhof Technika IV
Atomic X
PCC Speaker when's and where's:
Friday, April 20
4:30 - 5:45 Katharine T Jacobs
6:00 - 7:15 Blue Mitchell
7:30 - 8:45 Zeb Andrews
Portland Community College - Cascade Campus
Moriarty Arts and Humanities Building
705 N Killingsworth St, Portland, OR 97217
Auditorium Room 104
Pacific City to Newport. 50 miles with one grueling painful climb due to a missed turn. But a wonderful sunny day otherwise.
DSC05519
The background is the famous haystack rock, claimed by the locals to be third-tallest such "intertidal" structure in the world.
Shot with:
Canon F1 35mm
100mm lens
Kodachrome 25
80b filter
Black Pro-Mist filter
Copyright © 2010 by Craig Paup. All rights reserved.
Any use, printed or digital, in whole or edited, requires my written permission.
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.
View of the surf looking south from Ecola Park towards Cannon Beach. Haystack Rock can be seen at the top right with many future haystacks in the background
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.
A beach along the Port Orford coastal city. The views were spectacular here.
© 1999 Gary L. Quay.
This is the famous Haystack Rock at Canon Beach, Oregon. I took this picture back in 1999 with a camera without internal metering. I was fairly new at it then, so I am pleasantly surprised that it turned out.
Camera: Hasselblad 500CM
Lens: 80mm Carl Zeiss
Film: Fuji Velvia
Rescanned and uploaded better version 1/31/21.
# #pnwexplored #hasselblad #oregonexplored #pacificnorthwest #garyquay #cascadiaexplored #oregon #onlyinoregon #viewfromhere #YourShotPhotographer #cannonbeach #filmphotography #pnwcrew #myoregon #mediumformat #haystackrock
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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.
Every year, I attend a medical conference in Seaside, Oregon and I like to stay at the Surfsand in Canon Beach. This was my spectacular view off of my Balcony. I had just returned from a long day of meetings and went out my balcony to wind down. I could barely see Haystack Rock under the full moon lights, so I set up my camera and tripod. Normally I prefer to get up close to shoot it more intimately, but I was too tired to walk out there late at night.
The resort rooms do not have air conditioning, and I sleep hot, so I left my balcony door open all night. People like to have bonfires on the beach, and the smell of campfire drifted my way as I drifted off to sleep listening to the waves crashing in the distance. Such a peaceful and rejuvenating experience.
This is a single edited image using a custom Z8 linear camera profile to edit this photo in Lightroom with custom curves (gamma, end-points, mid-tones, and local/global tone mapping contrast), and finished editing in Photoshop using Adobe Lossless RAW layers.
Copyright 2023 Chris Ross Photography. All Rights Reserved. Do not copy, share, link, or use this image in any form- print, digital, or otherwise- on blogs, personal or professional websites or any other media form. This work is protected by international copyright laws and agreements. No part of this photo stream may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without my permission.
Famous for Haystack Rock towering 235 feet from the edge of the shoreline, long sandy stretches of beach and beautiful State Parks nearby, Cannon Beach offers an exceptional Oregon Coast experience.
A walk along the beach is a visual treat, with ever-changing vistas of ocean, mountains and rugged coastal outcroppings including Haystack Rock, a National Wildlife Refuge where visitors will discover colorful tide pools and nesting seabirds including Tufted Puffins.
Just minutes from downtown Cannon Beach is Ecola State Park, perched dramatically on the edge of a headland and offering panoramic coastal views, easy walking paths to scenic picnic areas and extensive hiking trails.
The picturesque small-town village by the sea is easily walkable and visitors can explore meandering pathways, enjoy public art and courtyards spilling over with flowers. Known as one of the Northwest’s top art towns, Cannon Beach is filled with art galleries, specialty shops, cafes and fine dining restaurants. Visitors can watch glassblowers at work in their studio or attend year-round live theater performances.
A wide selection of luxurious oceanfront lodgings overlook this remarkable stretch of coastline, putting visitors just steps from scenic wonders and minutes from outstanding recreation areas and exceptional Oregon Coast sightseeing.
Reference: visittheoregoncoast.com/cities/cannon-beach/
Image best viewed in large screen.
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