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Thread: Large Format Landscapes

  1. #15321
    mat4226's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2010
    Location
    Columbus, OH
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    146

    Re: Large Format Landscapes

    Columbus is < 1 hour from Hocking Hills and a pretty easy drive, Winter weather pending. Worth a few days of exploration, but close enough to make a nice day trip with multiple locations.

  2. #15322
    Vaughn's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Humboldt County, CA
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    9,223

    Re: Large Format Landscapes

    Quote Originally Posted by mat4226 View Post
    [CENTER]Under the Waterfall, Ash Cave
    Hocking Hills, Ohio...
    Very fun image. Looks to be a great place to explore.
    "Landscapes exist in the material world yet soar in the realms of the spirit..." Tsung Ping, 5th Century China

  3. #15323

    Re: Large Format Landscapes

    More Hocking Hills:

    Darkroom Print 7 by Nokton48, on Flickr

    Darkroom Print 6 by Nokton48, on Flickr

    The Devil's Bathtub at Old Man's Cave.

    4x5 Sinar Norma, Tri-X very old Filmpack. ADOX Borax MQ, Ilford Multigrade RC paper
    Flikr Photos Here: https://www.flickr.com/photos/18134483@N04/

    “The secret of getting ahead is getting started.”
    ― Mark Twain

  4. #15324

    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    klamath falls, oregon
    Posts
    1,732

    Re: Large Format Landscapes

    Great images, Mat and Daniel. A lot of other very nice stuff at your web page, Mat. I'll have to check out the podcast!

  5. #15325
    Tim Sandstrom
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    San Jose, CA
    Posts
    318

    Re: Large Format Landscapes

    Beautiful, love your framing and the way the you've emphasized the little group of trees, always enjoy you work. Mat.

    Quote Originally Posted by mat4226 View Post
    Under the Waterfall, Ash Cave
    Hocking Hills, Ohio

    Tachihara 8x10 + 150 SSXL
    Ilford HP5+ in Pyrocat HD

  6. #15326

    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    Newbury, Vermont
    Posts
    2,292

    Re: Large Format Landscapes

    Daniel...apologies for not having commented earlier - but I almost get a sense of vertigo with your images. While I initially liked the first image over the second for its "tightness," the second gives me more of a natural perspective...like I could look down a little lower and see my feet.

    I also like the transition, in the second image - from the "brief" bit of serenity implied by the stilled tree reflections in the lower left (evokes Paul Caponigro's Redding, Ct. woods/pond photo?) - but this stillness quickly dissolves into the vortex...twisting into the ominous/mysterious opening below. Nice!

    At this point...Hocking Hills is very much on my bucket list! Any recommendations for time of year to visit? Thanks!

  7. #15327

    Join Date
    Jun 2017
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    West Coast
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    2,136

    Re: Large Format Landscapes

    Quote Originally Posted by mat4226 View Post
    [CENTER]Under the Waterfall, Ash Cave
    Hocking Hills, Ohio

    [URL="https://www.flickr.com/photos/mat4226/50732256148/"]
    That’s spectacular, Mat!

  8. #15328

    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    Newbury, Vermont
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    2,292

    Re: Large Format Landscapes

    Quote Originally Posted by David Schaller View Post
    That's a nice one to do last, and you had beautiful weather!
    Yeah…about that weather. Four years prior to this (Sept. 2016) image, on the morning of the sixth of a seven-day, six (AMC) hut hike, we were having breakfast at Lakes of the Clouds hut, in the shadow of Mt. Washington…with plans to head up and over Washington, onto Clay, Jefferson, Adams, and Madison (with a final sleep over at Madison Hut) - but we found ourselves in the jaws of two storm systems…with everyone at Lakes that morning anxiously evaluating weather data on cellphones (thinking back to the days of basically wetting a finger and holding it up to the wind, and trying not to think about a winter climb here years before - on a day when this very hut lost half of its roof to the wind!)…with much discussion, some of it heated, among groups of hikers about levels of risk, personal responsibility, and plans of action. Quick exit down Ammonoosuc Ravine? Stay put? Up and over the Camel Path, over to Lion’s Head…and down? Over to Madison Hut…but via. Westside to avoid Washington - and stick to Gulfside for the duration…thereby avoiding all other peaks? Drop into the Great Gulf via. Six Husbands? (did that in a hail storm once…and the “drop” was almost literal!).

    So we climbed up and over Washington that morning - so far OK but in very thick fog…then dipping below Clay, after which, in the presence of approaching thunder, we decided to go up Jefferson…on the summit of which, while in the act of exchanging cellphones with a woman so we could photograph each others hiking parties…I felt that slight but unmistakable trickle of electrons which often precedes a lightning strike. At that point we all split up and headed down separately (extremely important to avoid a potential communal zap!), but within sight of each other…down into the slightly safer scrub, and into Edmunds Col, which by its shape acts to concentrate and funnel a northwest blow with great ferocity…which on this day was accompanied by lightning, thunder, and ultimately hail - stones of which being large enough that we were forced to seek shelter on the lee side of a large rock, where the weather kept us for the better part of an hour, after which, while the hail had become a steady wind-blown rain, with the occasional crack of nearby lightning, we acknowledged that the only semi-sensible way forward would be to stay off of our remaining peaks (Adams and Madison), and head directly over to Madison Hut…where we finally (and very gratefully!) arrived as we had started that day…in a pea-soup fog.

    Fast forward to Sept. 2016: in the four years which intervened between our ill fated attempt detailed above, we’d managed to finish all of the remaining NH “4000 footers” on our list…except for Adams and Madison. So, on Labor Day weekend of ‘16…we drove up into Jefferson notch, and, accompanied by “perfect” weather (abundant sunshine, just a slight breeze, temps in the low 60’s F - a comparative walk in the park!), hiked up over Caps ridge, hooked into the Gulfside trail, up over Adams, ditched our packs at Madison Hut, and, finally, finished our 4K’s on the Summit of Madison…where I handed my cellphone to a french Canadian woman (who spoke no english) who photographed us on the summit…replete with our foam-core “#48 Madison” cutout which we’d brought with us:

    Click image for larger version. 

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    Later that same evening, just before dinner, we walked up a short trail to Star Lake…where we sat for awhile in the fading light, taking in the scene before us - with the summit of Mt. Madison above:

    Click image for larger version. 

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    Next day - the hike out…back over Gulfside and to our car…and then, just as we’d started to round the peak of Jefferson, Marlene says “lets climb it again!” So we do…and at the summit Marlene says, “this is number one!” Say what? Yup…we’re doing them all again - starting with “Jeffs!”

    And now…four years later - myself at 66yrs., my wife Marlene a “still youthful” 64…our steps having noticeably slowed, our packs feeling just a bit heavier…not at all certain that we’ll actually finish “round two” of the 48 4K’s, but still feeling motivated do what we can, for as long as we can…wherever this may take us.

  9. #15329

    Re: Large Format Landscapes

    Thanks John! I like Star Lake!

    Old Mans Cave Upper Falls 1 by Nokton48, on Flickr

    One more from Hocking Hills. Old Man's Cave Upper Falls. Just a stone's throw from the parking lot! 4x5 Sinar Norma
    Flikr Photos Here: https://www.flickr.com/photos/18134483@N04/

    “The secret of getting ahead is getting started.”
    ― Mark Twain

  10. #15330

    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    Newbury, Vermont
    Posts
    2,292

    Re: Large Format Landscapes

    Thanks Daniel...alas, not LF - but Fuji/Voigtlander 667W, handheld at 1/15th...trying to get some DOF. Very much on my bucket list to do what I can to get back there with a 5x7 - most likely my DIY plywood "woody," purely for weight savings.

    Your photo above reminds me of a falls sequence named "coliseum falls," a short ways up the Bemis Brook trail, starting near the bottom of Crawford Notch. I did a series there which did not work out nearly as well as yours at Hocking Hills - but I have not given up on it yet!

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