View allAll Photos Tagged makingof
Why does snow always need to be white? Nicolas and Loris Falquet, brothers and Mammut pro freeriders, turned a fundamental winter concept on its head. Together with the photographer Jeremy Bernard, countless colored pigments and a futuristic atomizer, they achieved a rare feat: ski images unlike any the world has ever seen.
Photo: Jeremy Bernard
More info: bit.ly/MakingOf_Colors
These cotton bags will soon contain copies of Fray Issue 1: Busted! and be on their way to our awesome subscribers!
Cont'd..
I put my tripod on one of the steps on the escalator and fired off a couple 6-second exposures. Upon returning to the top, I was able to recruit someone to act as a subject.
Model: Iren Mirror, Photo: Oriol Morte, Stylism: Ricardo Pardo, Makeup: Nuria Raja & Amanda Polan, Photo assistant: Maria Villa, Stylism assistant: Elena Suau
Why does snow always need to be white? Nicolas and Loris Falquet, brothers and Mammut pro freeriders, turned a fundamental winter concept on its head. Together with the photographer Jeremy Bernard, countless colored pigments and a futuristic atomizer, they achieved a rare feat: ski images unlike any the world has ever seen.
Photo: Jeremy Bernard
More info: bit.ly/MakingOf_Colors
This one's a:
- "making of" the back-of-the-towers pano, next shot up.
- pretty good "getting high" shot.
- and a "Hi Mom!" shot, all in one :)
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Back in 2005 we were exploring the area behind Fisher Towers and had got ourselves pretty far off the trail when we stumbled on an arch.
(We've been trying to get back to it ever since but there was always some reason not to...)
The best part of that day, though, was the couple that followed us out there. A little older than us maybe, and we could tell that the only reason they'd followed us was that the guy wanted to get away... from his wife. Red face, set jaw, clomping along, he was not having a good day. I remember him dressed in khakis, a collared madras shirt and flat-soled leather street shoes, not what you'd usually wear for a hike (though my imagination may be filling in some detail).
Their conversation (for lack of a better word) went like this:
"Stanley, where are we going?"
- no reply -
"Stanley, are we on the trail?"
- again, no reply -
"Stanley, do we know how to get back?"
- silence -
(fainter) "Stanley?"
(fading) "Stanley?"
They continued straight in after we'd turned around, into a trailless area of bad footing and long sheer dropoffs. Since then , whenever the name Stanley has popped up, we remember him and wonder if they (especially if she) ever made it back out.
We'd named it Stanley's Arch in his honor. Now there's an accepted name for it (Big Bro Arch), even a cairned path going right out to it. Trailblazers we were, who knew?
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Summer 2014 2nd leg: "Getting High"
July 10: Waking to onliness at Fisher Towers; finally getting back to Stanley's Arch; moving camp to Canyonlands.
LightArt-Photography by JanLeonardo
(Light Painting)
On tour with my friend and assistent Gustavo Mercerat www.intifotografie.com/
Made with Canon 5D MKIII, Carl Zeiss Distagon 15/2,8, Manfrotto CarbonTripods and High Performance Torches from Led Lenser.
May the light be with you.