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A second time visit here, where I got some shots back in Autumn 2013. However, I really wanted a snowy backdrop next time, but will have to wait for that one.
HSS everyone, quite a lot of PP done on this one: 3XP HDR image, converted to black and white, the line of trees photo-shopped to increase amount and perspective and finally a little bit of mist and contrast reducing in the distance.
Week 12: 8 seconds exposure. Note that the only postprocessing step here was desaturating (!) a bit.
An HDR infrared photo of a tree in the Texas Hill Country.
Prints and digital licensing available HERE
Two trees before sunrise. One taken only seven minutes after the other. Was very windy this morning and it blew in the clouds quickly. I arrived here an hour before sunrise and waited until after sunrise to get a better Image, but the sun was covered by the clouds until i packed up the camera and tripod. I never got the light i was waiting for. Just as i had walked 50 yards from this spot the sun decided to pop out, creating the light i was looking for and also a rainbow. This seems to be my luck with photography lately, always just missing the best moments by a minute
or two.
We are currently getting hit with a huge snow storm in the Boston area.
I have been to this location about 7 times and this is the first picture I have posted. I always seem to have trouble positioning myself in this location because of the vanishing point. I tried being on the side, lying down, far away and it just didn't look right. I ended up being right in the middle which breaks some photography rules but I don't really like following these rules anyway. Where would you position the person/me/model?
Tree sparrow (Passer montanus) perched on a shrub branch.
Mazurek (Passer montanus) siedzący na gałązce krzewu.
Trees, Alpine Terrain. North Cascades, Washington. September 10, 2017. © Copyright 2017 G Dan Mitchell - all rights reserved.
A group of small trees stands on the edge of a deep valley, Cascade Mountains, Washington
This is another photograph from my brief visit to Washington's North Cascades at Artist Point, high in the mountains at the end of the road between Mount Shuksan and Mount Baker. I had a free day, a rental car, and a forecast to relatively clear weather, so I went. The location is both popular and spectacular. The road ends at a very high point where snow still lay on the ground, and nearby are many trails, including the popular Artist Point trail that ascends a small rise nearby and offers excellent views in all directions.
There is a lot of intriguing stuff in this spot. Obviously the nearby alpine peaks with their extensive glaciers are impressive. Below there are two deep valleys leading away in opposite directions — one to the south towards a very large lake and the other to the north and leading to peaks on the Canadian border. The immediate terrain is alpine, with rocky areas (though less so that in the Sierra Nevada), small tarns, many plants, and small stands of beautiful trees that I believe are mountain hemlock. In this photograph one of those stands is positioned above the upper reaches of the valley that eventually leads south, and across this valley there are a few more trees, deeply eroded terrain, and some meadowy areas.
G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist. His book, "California's Fall Color: A Photographer's Guide to Autumn in the Sierra" is available from Heyday Books and Amazon.
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All media © Copyright G Dan Mitchell and others as indicated. Any use requires advance permission from G Dan Mitchell.
The lone tree on Halickshole Hill in the New Forest. Arriving in the car park when it was still dark seems to an occupational hazard if your a landscape photographer, but the walk in emerging daylight to the tree made up for it. The only noise I could hear was a Stag deer in the background,
Triptychon. Piictorialistic abstraction. Part of the set: MORPH.
Series: Asphalt Jungle. One Tree. Krieau #6.
P1180800 , P1180802 Manipulation
Tree Swallow (Tachycineta bicolor).
Hagerman National Wildlife Refuge.
Grayson County, Texas. 20 May 2020.
Nikon D7500. Tamron SP 150-600mm f/5-6.3 Di VC USD.
(600mm) f/6.3 @ 1/320 sec. ISO 360.
Female Tree Swallow at nest entrance. A rare breeder in North Central Texas. KN
Tree.
14/12/16.
Pentax K1000 SLR.
Fomapan 200 shot at 400.
Developed by me.
Rodinal, 1+50, 20 mins, 20C, Fomafix P, spiral tank.
Scanned with Epson Scan V550.
035008
The Christmas tree skirt I'm working on. I like the way the asterisk block technique looks like the star of Bethlehem from old kid's books. Blogged.
Since I photographed this birch tree in a marshy area I'm pretty sure it's a type of Birch (Betula) called a River Birch (Betula nigra). It is the southernmost New World Birch and the only Birch that occurs at low altitudes in the southeastern United States.
Ranges from southwest Connecticut south to northern Florida, west to east Texas, and north to southeast Minnesota; local in Massachusetts and southern New Hampshire; to 1000' (305 m); to 2500' (762 m) in southern Appalachians.
Habitat wet soil of stream banks, lakes, swamps, and flood plains; with other hardwoods. Its ability to thrive on moist sites makes it useful for erosion control.
ISO400, aperture f/11, exposure .003 seconds (1/400) focal length 300mm
Everyone but me runs to the front side of the Tree of Life at Disney's Animal Kingdom for the animated light show. No light show but I prefer the beauty and solitude of the back side plus I had the viewing platform all to myself.