Tag Archives: hill

Alaska#12

Gull colony on a vertical cliff and waterfall, Chugach Mountain range, seen from Prince William Sound, Alaska.  Multiple frames were stitched together to make this pano shot.  Nikon D4S loaded with the Nikkor 200-500mm f5.6 lens.  The easiest way to make such a shot from a bouncing boat, with heavy camera/lens hand-held is to fire the shots in high speed continuous shooting mode (9 frames per second for my D4S) and go from the left of the scene to the right.  Yes, using a high shutter speed helps to get everything sharp.  I used 1/640 s. 

Waterfall and Gull Colony, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA

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Alaska#9

Gull colony on a vertical cliff, Chugach Mountain range, seen from Prince William Sound, Alaska.  Multiple frames from a D4S shot with Nikkor 200-500mm f5.6 lens, stitched together to make this pano.  Seeing so many gulls at once on a vertical cliff was a first for me.

Gull Colony, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA

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Alaska#7

Iceberg, snow, glacier, hill and clouds, Chugach Mountain range, seen from Prince William Sound, Alaska.  There are so many elements here.  The foreground iceberg in blue, the extension of  a glacier on the right, snow on the left and the hill covered in clouds.  I was shooting with my D4S loaded with the Nikkor 200-500mm f5.6 lens and this scene needed me to go wider.  Instead of changing my lens, I simply shot several frames that covered the top left, the top right, the bottom left and the bottom right.  I stitched them all together to create this image.  Images of this form factor are usually not stitched, but given the lens I had with me at the time, I had to improvise.  I am glad I did.  Looking at this image, I still feel the same chills that I felt that day. 

Glacier and hill, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA

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Discovering my vision at Rainbow Falls, CA

I went to Rainbow Falls in California’s Eastern Sierra over the July 4th weekend.  My first visit to the falls was in the middle of the day, with my family.  Since the sun was shining into the falls at that time of the day, it formed a rainbow at the base of the falls upon which it is named.  From a photographer’s perspective, the light was too harsh and no good waterfall image could be produced at that time.

I came back the next day, early enough before sunrise, to get the light right for a waterfall image.  While the grand view from the standard vista point was great, it did not offer anything satisfying for me.  For example, one search for Rainbow Falls, CA in images.google.com, yields several images of the standard view.  I began by making a standard view image as well.  Here it is.  It does not impress me and therefore it has not been published in my web gallery.

Rainbow Falls, CA

Rainbow Falls, CA. (Standard View from Vista Point)

After getting the standard shot out of the way, I started exercising my visual imagination to make additional more satisfying images.  Using my 70-200mm f2.8 lens at 200mm, I made a frame that was later cropped to this 1:3 format.  This is a section of the waterfall towards the right side of the view from the vista point.  To me, this image is a compelling composition.  It has a series of waters falling from the top right into the bottom one-thirds of the image, where there is a diagonal flow of water from the left to the right.  There are distinct shapes and flows in the top, middle and bottom one-thirds of the image that grabs attention.

Rainbow Falls (section), CA, USA

Rainbow Falls (section), CA, USA

Another shot using my 70-200mm f2.8 lens with 2x teleconverter (set at effective 400mm), is shown below.

Rainbow Falls (section), CA, USA

Rainbow Falls (section), CA, USA

This one shows a single strand of waterfall to the right of the image counter-balancing the diagonal cascade going left to right.

Another 400mm shot is shown below.

Rainbow Falls (section), CA, USA

This one emphasizes the wall of water towards the right of the view from the vista point.  The wall of water and its shapes/texture is counter balanced by the rocks at the bottom right.

As I wrapped up my shoot, I used the same 400mm setup to frame a couple of shots of the runoff from the falls.

Runoff from Rainbow Falls, CA.

Runoff from Rainbow Falls, CA.

This one showcases the whites from the falls runoff counterbalanced by the green grass on the shore.  I saw this first and upon closer examination, I found a dead fallen tree bark whose branches pointed towards these whites.  I thought that they formed a perfect set of complementary subjects to juxtapose in an image.  Here it is.

Dead tree bark and whites from Rainbow Falls runoff, CA, USA

Dead tree bark and whites from Rainbow Falls runoff, CA, USA

Notice how the shapes in the branches of the dead tree bark, mirrors the shapes of the whites (the branches pointing one way and the whites following it).

Using this post, I want to encourage more photographers to look beyond the obvious.  The first thing that you see when you get to location should be photographed, but one should not stop there.  The better photographs come from staying there, a bit longer, and looking for what else is there, or, how else the scene may be photographed.  Changing viewpoints and changing lenses are the simple exercises to get you started on the road to eventually change what you see and see more.