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Mobius Arch

Alabama Hills National Scenic Area

Lone Pine, California

Alabama Hills. Looking through Mobius Arch to Mount Whitney

... at least until I can think of a title that's more consistent with the rest of the series.

 

Holga 120N, FP4+

D-76 1+3, 11 min

 

This image is protected by copyright and may not be used in any way, for any purpose, without my written permission. Please contact me if you would like to use any of my photos.

  

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The blue hour in the Alabama Hills means one spot, Mobius Arch and the classic view of Lone Pine Peak through the Arch. We got there plenty early to get setup and to be able to catch the alpenglow on Lone Pine just before sunrise.

©All rights reserved (Manuel D. Castellanos) All my images are protected under copyright laws my not be used in any form without my explicit written permission.Thanks

Two pieces of tape twisted into intertwining Möbius strips which can be formed by attaching the ends of a strip of paper together with a half-twist. As a mathematical object, it was discovered by Johann Benedict Listing and August Ferdinand Möbius in 1858, but it had already appeared in Roman mosaics from the third century CE. The Möbius strip is a non-orientable surface, meaning that within it one cannot consistently distinguish clockwise from counterclockwise turns, and only possessing 1 edge and 1 side.

Snow clouds over the mountains blocked some of the afternoon sun, making great conditions for shooting the arch

A twisted, alluringly weird vine, growing in a wild thicket off a sidewalk, in...

 

DeKalb County (Winnona Park), Georgia, USA.

19 May 2021.

 

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▶ Photo by Yours For Good Fermentables.com.

▶ For a larger image, type 'L' (without the quotation marks).

— Follow on Facebook: YoursForGoodFermentables.

— Follow on Instagram: @tcizauskas.

▶ Camera: Olympus OM-D E-M10 II.

— Lens: Olympus M.14-42mm F3.5-5.6 II R

— Focal length: 11 mm

— Aperture: ƒ/3.5

— Shutter speed: 1/30

— ISO: 200

— Olympus WCON-P-01 Wide Converter.

— Edit: Photoshop Elements 15.

▶ Commercial use requires explicit permission, as per Creative Commons.

Alabama Hills. Eastern Sierras, California.

 

August 31, 2016

Alabama Hills, CA

 

The beautiful texture credit goes to

www.flickr.com/photos/lenabem-anna/

The Sierra Nevada Mountains are framed in the Mobius Arch located in the Alabama Hills outside of Lone Pine, California.

 

View large - 'Mobius Arch' On Black

 

View the Entire - Death Valley 2008 Set

View my - Most Interesting according to Flickr

Umejima, Tokyo, Japan

I met my niece and her boyfriend in the Sierra-Nevada Mountains for Thanksgiving and then showed them some of the spectacular scenery in the area for a week. This is Mobius Arch, which is in the Alabama Hills. The mountain in the background is Lone Pine Peak. The light on this morning was about as perfect as it gets. I don't know what to say about this except it was about as beautiful a sunrise as I've ever seen.

Möbius arch (black and white) from a different perspective; Alabama Hills near Lone Pine, CA

Mobius Arch in Alabama Hills, California.

Mobius Arch Sunset

Alabama Hills National Scenic Area

Lone Pine, California

Mobius Arch & Mount Whitney, Alabama Hills, Lone Pine, California.

Two Möbius strips made from sticky tape, intertwined with each other. A Möbius strip is a mathematical model with only 1 side and 1 edge.

I dug this one up from the archives. I think its my first shot with a shooting star so im pretty stoked.

On route to Tate Britain from Victoria I passed this wonderfully designed building and just had to get a few snaps for posterity and further playfulness in Photoscape X pro

"Adopt the secret of nature: her secret is patience.” -

Ralph Waldo Emerson

 

www.mckendrickphotography.com

Not every trip to Death Valley began or ended in Death Valley. Detours were made, this time to the Alabama Hills outside of Lone Pine.

 

We are revisiting my trips to Death Valley, starting in 2003, and posting one photo a day from each trip, in anticipation of my upcoming trip next month.

3 exposure HDR.

 

Thank you very much for your kind comments and faves.

Alabama Hills, Lone Pine, California. Looking through Mobius Arch to Mount Whitney. It wasn't until after I had taken the photo that I spotted the dog.

edit: redid the exposure blending to avoid some haloing in my previous upload.

Alabama Hills, California

Alabama Hills, Lone Pine, California.

 

Pentax K-1

Irix 15mm

I had some FUN with kids telling how "Möbius strip" works, and letting them practice with the red thing.

 

If you haven't heard about "Möbius strip" which was discovered by the German mathematicians August Ferdinand Möbius and Johann Benedict Listing (each one discovered independently) in the late 19th century, you may find from the internet.

An hour and a half before sunset and already the shadows were creating sand art in the gypsum dunes of White Sands National Park near Alamogordo, New Mexico.

Alabama Hills arch with Mount Whitney behind

I found this picture in my archives today. It was taken on May 2013.

Alabama Hills, California.

A different perspective from one of the popular arches in the Alabama Hills.

In the Alabama Hills near Lone Pine

Alabama Hills,California

In the space of 10 minutes I must have heard 30 gunshots ring out just before dark in the Alabama Hills.

 

I hoped that it was just echos from the next valley over, perhaps hunters bringing down some unfortunate beast.

 

Things calmed down after the sun went down and we had fun doing a little light painting at Mobius Arch.

 

I lit the scene with one headlamp from various different angles and then layered them atop one another in Photoshop to get the ideal balance.

 

Enjoy and please share.

Gavin

www.fototripper.com

Mobius Arch - Whitney Portal - Alabama Hills

 

I arrived in Lone Pine, CA at about 5:00 p.m. planning to do a little hiking before attempting some late night arch shooting. Upon noticing the sun dipping below a bank of clouds, I quickly scampered down the trail to the most photographed arch in the area, and set up. I captured several different views as the sun was setting , but for now I am content to post this take.

 

Framed within the left third of the arch window is Lone Pine Peak. Currently at an elevation of 14, 404 ft, Mt. Whitney is the tallest peak in the Lower 48, and is seen here framed in the right third of the arch window.

 

Nikon D700

18-35mm f/3.5 at 21mm

1/6 Sec

f/22

ISO 125

Singh-Ray GND

 

Mobius Arch in the Alabama Hills is one the many interesting places located in the Owen River Valley just east of Mt. Whitney and the High Sierras. The location, just a few miles west of Lone Pine, CA, was home to hundreds of old Hollywood western movies over the past 50 years. What makes it so interesting for photography are the massive boulders scattered throughout the area, the countless rock formations, and the rolling hills all at the base of the Sierra Mountains. The 15ft. natural arch, which is an easy 200yd. hike from Movie Road, provides a unique window view of the majestic Sierras in the background.

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