A couple of interesting workshop announcements

From The Ansel Adams Gallery BlogMaking a Photograph: From Field to Print with Charles Cramer and Keith Walklet

This 2-day lecture/demonstration July 18 & 19 presents highlights from the 3-5 day workshops that Walklet and Cramer present for the Ansel Adams Gallery. Participants will learn valuable insights on photographing in the field, exposure of film and digital captures, and creating effective compositions, plus techniques that allow you to optimize these images to their fullest potential using Lightroom and Photoshop, all leading to the creation of compelling prints. This course will “open your eyes” to imagine the many possibilities within your image.

Rooms in Yosemite Valley are available for this workshop, but you must register by June 15th to reserve one.

I know Charlie and can confirm that he has a ton of useful information and insights to convey, and that he knows how to present them. I’ve only met Keith once… on the trail… last summer, when I briefly visited the two of them and a couple other photographers who were working out of Booth Lake near the Vogelsang High Sierra Camp. I first encountered Keith while I was photographing near Townsley Lake and I saw what looked to be a heavily-laden backpacker approaching – but it was just Keith carrying a giant load of photo equipment. (If I understood correctly, he was using a full DSLR system, a full MF digital system, and LF film… in the backcountry. Sheesh!)

Also…

Gary Crabbe announces a Photo Business Workshop in Utah

I’m very pleased to announce that I will be co-teaching a workshop on The Business of Outdoor and Nature Photography in conjunction with fellow photographer Charlie Borland and Aspen Photo Workshops. The workshop will be held November 5th through 8th, 2009 at Ruby’s Inn & Conference Center near Bryce Canyon National Park in Utah. Joining us will be Marv Johnson, CEO of the online stock agency, Fogstock.

The focus of this workshop is about business, and takes place during the day, so photographers are free to shoot during the sweet light hours. As many people will know, Ruby’s Inn is within a few minutes drive of Bryce Canyon National Park, famous for it’s geology and wildly-shaped hoodoos.

Tufa Towers, Mono Lake, Dawn

Tufa Towers, Mono Lake, Dawn

Tufa Towers, Mono Lake, Dawn. Mono Lake, California. June 7, 2009. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Mono Lake and shoreline tufa towers are illuminated by dawn light.

I more or less accidentally ended up at Mono Lake early on the second morning of my early June “Yosemite trip.” My plans are often somewhat flexible when I’m out doing photography, but they were very flexible this time. My original plan had been to try to grab a last-minute campsite in Yosemite Valley and shoot there for the better part of two days, but when my position on the campsite waiting list made this option look less than certain I decided to instead head up to Tuolumne Meadows, over Tioga Pass, and get a camp site on the east side. Being only a 15 minute drive from the iconic South Tufa location at Mono Lake it was hard not to head over there before dawn.

The dawn light can be truly stunning at this location if you hit it just right. Ideal conditions might include glass smooth water on the lake, some clouds over the Sierra crest and perhaps directly overhead, but clear sky to the east so that the first sun can hit the towers without obstruction. When I arrived at Mono before sunrise it did not look like it would end up being quite that “ideal” day. A fairly solid overcast filled the sky to the east, with just a few small holes in the clouds that might allow some beams of light to pass through. But since I was there – and since I’ve learned that conditions can evolve in interesting and surprising ways – I wandered on out to the water’s edge and set up for a first shot in a small bay-like spot. After shooting the very first light hitting some towers out in the water I decided to move a bit to my right and into a more jumbled area of the tufa where I found this composition looking out between towers toward the lake and the nearly clear sky to the north.

This photograph is not in the public domain. It may not be used on websites, blogs, or in any other media without explicit advance permission from G Dan Mitchell.

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Burned Forest Near Mariposa Grove

Burned Forest Near Mariposa Grove, Yosemite National Park

Burned Forest Near Mariposa Grove. Yosemite National Park. June 7, 2009. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Burned forest near the Mariposa redwood grove in Yosemite National Park, California.

During my recent visit to the Mariposa Grove of Sequoias in southern Yosemite National Park I hiked up the main trail through the grove. While the forest and occasional redwood tree to my left were certainly interesting, my attention was drawn to the burned area to the right. The trail in places followed the very edge of fairly recent wildfire, and in some spots crossed it.

I am fascinated with forest fire areas and how we perceive them. As a kid I remember learning from Smokey the Bear that forest fires are a tragic thing. But later I became less certain, and I came to view the wild fires as a natural and periodic element of a healthy forest. Aside from the human tragedies can accompany wildfires, I began to change my perspective on the aesthetic value of these burned areas, and I learned to see a certain stark beauty in them. A recently burned forest like this one is not necessarily an ugly thing if you look at it this way. The open light, verticals of black and gray, the intense brown of singed leaves and needles, the contrast with the reddish-brown of the forest floor, and the appearance of scattered new growth all create a special landscape. And a few years later as the cycle starts again and wildflowers and bushes grow wildly there can be a riot of color below the skeletons of the old trees.

This photograph is not in the public domain. It may not be used on websites, blogs, or in any other media without explicit advance permission from G Dan Mitchell.

keywords: forest, tree, burn, char, scar, fire, wild fire, aftermath, brown, bare, growth, green, gray, black, mariposa, redwood, sequoia, grove, landscape, nature, travel, ecology, environment, fallen, california, usa, yosemite, national park, stock

Spring, Dana Fork Meadow, Mounts Dana and Gibb

Spring, Dana Fork Meadow, Mounts Dana and Gibb

Spring, Dana Fork Meadow, Mounts Dana and Gibb. Yosemite National Park, California. June 7, 2009. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Spring returns to the high country as new growth begins in a meadow along the Dana Fork of the Tuolumne River with snow-dusted Mounts Dana and Gibb in the distance – Yosemite National Park, California.

After photographing Mono Lake early this Sunday morning on the first weekend of June and then packing up my camp, I headed up over Tioga Pass into Yosemite to do some photography in the park before starting my drive back to the SF Bay Area. As I came over the pass it was a beautiful morning… but now one that promised many obvious photographic opportunities. I love the very early spring conditions shortly after the trans-Sierra roads open; there is still a lot of snow around, the plants are just barely beginning their growth spurt, and there is water everywhere. However the lighting was very tough on this morning. Interesting clouds were beginning to build and a thin dusting of new snow from yesterday’s storm coated the highest peaks, but the atmosphere was filled with very bright bluish haze and the light was harsh – more like noon than mid-morning.

I had almost decided to not bother stopping for photography when I passed this meadow on the Dana Fork of the Tuolumne Meadow. I stop here often, many in the early evening later in the summer when the setting sun illuminates these peaks. When I saw that this part of the meadow was largely flooded by the high water of the river and that Mounts Dana and Gibb were backed by clouds I decided to stop and see what I could do with the scene. The technical challenge of the scene was the tremendous dynamic range between the eye-squinting brightness of the clouds and the shadows in the foreground of the meadow. So I made several different exposures and applied the “ND grad filter in post” technique of combining the properly exposed portions of each.

This photograph is not in the public domain. It may not be used on websites, blogs, or in any other media without explicit advance permission from G Dan Mitchell.

keywords: spring; meadow; rock; tree; river; water; reflection; grass; foliage; plants; forest; tree; mount; dana; gibb; fork; tuolumne; sierra; nevada; crest; snow; dusted; clouds; blue; sky; scenic; travel; landscape; yosemite; national park; california; usa; growth; stock

Photographer and visual opportunist. Daily photos since 2005, plus articles, reviews, news, and ideas.