Thatīs one of the reasons I still dream the day that I can buy myself a motorhome...
Printable View
the sweet smell of Provia 100f ,, Baxter State Park Maine, near south entrance
Sinar P 8x10" 210mm XL f32 metered with probe "sunrise"
PAINTRY MAINE
Steve, very atmospheric shot!
Steve,
it's almost like an oil painting from old masters. Nice!
Hugo
dof, Hugo, thank you. Was a refreshing experiance! everyone should see Baxter at least twice!:)
Apache Trail Arizona. 5X7 - 180 Nikkor
Very nice, Don. :)
Beautiful image, Donald.
Nice work Steve and Don.
Thanks for your generous comments
Another one from the Kampina, a Dutch nature reserve. Cambo wide with 120mm super symmar hm on tmax 400. f/32 exposed about 30 seconds, Lee one stop ND hard grad. Postproduction in Adobe Lightroom.
Yes!
+1, as they say
Clearing winter storm along Movie Road, near Lone Pine, California.
Wista VX / 210mm Schneider Apo-Symmar lens
http://i648.photobucket.com/albums/u...abamaHills.jpg
Frank and Duane: Stunning work, gentlemen!
Duane, I love the Lone Pine/Whitney region! Living on the west side of the range makes it very difficult for me to shoot on the East Side during the winter because of pass closures. I'm slightly envious.
--P
Pinkham & Smith lens.
Thanks. This is a version on Velvia 50.
Great images everyone... :)
An image I managed to capture, while exploring the origin of Alberta's Cowboy Trail, during the late afternoon hours in the spring of 2010.
jim k
A Collapsing Undular Bore, Along the Cowboy Trail, Mayerthorpe, Alberta, Canada, 2010
http://largeformatgroupimages.jimkit...s/10060602.jpg
You are the sky master, my friend. You can really get lost in this one...
+1 Jim
Imperial Dunes - 5X7 - 450 Nikkor M
Another winner Donald. Your work never fails to impress.
Gentlemen,
Thank you for your comments... :)
Alberta surely has its fair share of fabulous cloud formations.
jim k
Dear John,
Thank you... :)
Since you desire warmer weather compared to the cooler, colder weather, our summers are quite pleasant and temperate, but when a Chinook Wind decides to blow into town during the winter months, our daily temperatures can change from minus twenty Celsius to plus twenty degrees Celsius in a few hours. The Chinook winds are a welcome change during the winter.
That said, summer can be best described as occurring between midnight July 31 through to noon on August 1, and where every other temperature extreme occurs before and after that summer window. I do enjoy the calendar's late spring and early summer months, because the weather patterns are very boisterous at this time of the year, and although we do receive a few thunderstorms during the spring and summer seasons, they do not compare to the stronger more dramatic storm cells that develop to the east in the Province of Saskatchewan. Alberta's weather is always very diverse and predictably unpredictable, but the sun surely abounds above our heads for most of the year. June tends to be Calgary's wettest month of the year, but then again that statistic depends on what part of the province you happen to be in, and how close you are to the leeward side of the mountains.
I do have my favourite times during the year, and that happens to be every day, but I must do some research to answer your question more effectively. I will send you a note that should give you a few windows of opportunity to explore, where you should be able to enjoy the mountains, the foothills, the prairies, and our ingenious western culture without having to wear your long johns, but then again, I would still bring them. If you golf, then bring your sticks, because there are too many fabulous mountain golf courses, just across the line to the west in another great province called British Columbia.
jim k
Tree detail in Carmel, CA.Calumet C-1 8x10, 240mm G-Claron, fp4+, PMK, 4990 Scan
http://www.pbase.com/cloudswimmer/im...3/original.jpg
In the Olympic Mountains, Washington.
Across the strait is British Columbia.
I skipped a rock across the clouds, got dizzy, and hiked back down.
Tachi 4x5
Jurassic-era Fuji Pro 160s
Fuji A 240mm/9
Epson 4990/Epson Scan
http://farm6.static.flickr.com/5242/...21266487_z.jpg
Ice and Grass, Reflection Lake, Mount Rainier National Park
Tachihara 4x5, Caltar II-N 150mm f/5.6, Fuji Provia 100F
This is a perfect example to me of how much I suck using my Large Format camera. At the time I began framing this the patch of grasses in the bottom left were lit by the low sun, and the surrounding grasses were in shadow. 20 minutes later, or whatever it takes me, when I was finally ready to fire the shutter the light had shifted several feet and what I was left with wasn't what I had in mind... oh well. :) I still liked the blue reflections (a polarizer helped to emphasize the reflection).
Hey, it happens to everyone! I have a few pictures with the "last afterglow of the sun on the mountains", because I was just a tiny bit too slow for a picture with the real "afterglow". I've always wondered if those pictures of "clearing winter storm" would actually have been planned as "full grown grizzly winter storm", but then the ground glass fogged up under the dark cloth (which was pushed around by the wind and trying to pull the tripod down), the dark slide was frozen shut and the shutter had to be pre-fired 2 or 3 times to get going, so ... it became "clearing". :-)
Oh, I laughed many times while reading that - I love the idea that Clearing Winter Storm was meant to be Full Grown Grizzly Winter Storm. :) And yeah, it happens all the time (in fact, it happened with the ~4 or so shots I took that day) but all you can do is try, right? Maybe you'll come away with a winner you hadn't envisioned.
Try photographing under the redwoods or similar forest with a light overcast (and no wind). Best time is from about 10am to 2pm. Lots of contrast, and one can take their time as the light is pretty constant. Very relaxing LF photography. Well, hiking with 60 pounds of 8x10 for a couple miles or so is not too relaxing, but there are lots of opportunites from the road or just a few feet from the car if one does not want the exercise.
Vaughn
PS -- now, photography under the redwoods with the sun streaking in is another kettle of fish altogether! One needs to study the trees around oneself and guessimate how the light will be moving over the next 15 minutes or more. Dramatic shifts of light!
http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4151/...c27f2e36_b.jpg
6x12, Velvia 50.
Vaughn/Jim - sounds like fun to me. I'm about a lengthy day drive from Redwoods National Park, and I'm hoping to make it down there one of these days.
dofmaster - very nice! Where is that? I have a bit of a tough time gauging the scale, but it looks quite dramatic.
Here are a few I did this summer and fall.
Above Millers Ferry Lock & Dam - Catherine, AL
http://www.tedmastrandonas.com/image...0and%20Dam.jpg
Camp Road - Mount Cheaha State Park, AL
http://www.tedmastrandonas.com/images/Camp%20Road.jpg
Picnic Table Along the Nantahala River - Talc Mountain, NC
http://www.tedmastrandonas.com/image...la%20River.jpg
Bridge Over Bradley Fork - Smokemont Campground, GSMNP
http://www.tedmastrandonas.com/image...ley%20Fork.jpg
Ted
http://www.tedmastrandonas.com/
Ted, love the tone and particularly like image #4.
Ted, the picnic table is my particular favorite. Love the balance of it.
4x5 (cropped) - 305 Repro Claron
Very nice Donald, where was this one taken?
Mike
Ted, very nice work. Especially like the bridge in #4! Nice to see some work from someone close by.