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EOTS, Luc, Polyglot - Thanks very much!
Joel - Thank you as well - I appreciate what you mean. I'm as guilty as anyone for the usual Rainier shots, but I was really pleased to get up close and personal with it on this trip. It is such a spectacular mountain, particularly when you can you're up close.
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"There is little or no ‘reality’ in the blacks, grays and whites of either the informational or expressive black-and-white image" -Ansel Adams
Tyler,
Great image of the Great Mountain. I love so many things about this shot; the subject (a personal favorite of mine), the breaking clouds and cloud dappled light, etc. It is very reminiscent of the work of Vittorio Sella. Bravo!
When I first saw it, I assumed it was shot with a long lens, a 300mm or maybe even a 450mm. Then I saw in your caption that you used a "normal" 150mm. Was this taken from the Nisqually Vista Trail, or were you up higher than that? Since it was just a couple weeks ago, did you encounter much snow. Were snow shoes or skis required?
Kerry
Nice one. IMHO Mt. Rainier and environs are underrepresented photographic subjects, compared with the Grand Canyon, Yosemite, Yellowstone and other "American West" locations. I like all the Ansel Adams Mount Rainier images. It seems that Rainier does not rank as a photographic subject, as much as its beauty would justify. We did a family trip to Rainier and Olympic this summer, and the place was stunning.
Thanks Zach! I actually had some confusion in my notes about exactly how I exposed it (sloppy notes) so I'm very happy to have not completely screwed it up.
Thank you very much! Just before you commented I was looking at it sort of thinking the same thing about the focal length - it really does look like it could have been taken at a great distance. It's a lot of mountain for a normal lens. I set off towards Glacier Vista (along the trail you mention), but couldn't see a damn thing. I pressed on about another half mile as far as I could before the skyline trail switches back towards Panorama Point. That last half mile or so was snowy on the ground, but easily hiked in boots. Lots of skiers and snowboarders passed me going down though.
For your amusement, the first photo here was at Glacier Vista (no view at all), and the second is where I set up my tripod for a few photos. (I can remove these if they don't belong here):
Thank you! My kudos for hiking as far as Camp Muir - I suspect that's beyond me. I was surprised how close you could get climbing the skyline trail, and with (what seemed to me) relative ease. I don't know Paradise all that well, and typically like to hike around Sunrise on the east side instead.
I think part of the illusion of "closeness" comes from the shear size of the mountain - the view here encompasses about 8000ft of elevation (I was around 6800ft, and I'd guess this includes 6400-14400ft)
In that photo above I have my 400mm lens mounted, focused and ready to go (I was focused on the Nisqually Iceflow when it clouded over again). I waited about 30 minutes in that one spot and the clouds never parted again so I didn't get the shot. That was the only telephoto shot I had planned up there.
I tend to agree (though as photographed as it is, I am personally in awe every moment I'm in Yosemite). Mount Rainier is a pretty spectacular place, and I'm not sure why it's not the kind of destination some of the other western parks are. I'm always finding new inspiration there (whether than translates to photos or not).
/sorry to hijack the thread.
EDIT: D'oh! I'm an idiot and had my notes jumbled up. This shot WAS taken with my 210mm, not my 150mm lens. Arg! Not that they're vastly different, but the one time anyone's actually interested in the focal length, I noted it wrong.
Last edited by MumbleyJoe; 7-Nov-2011 at 20:36. Reason: Correcting my errror.
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