“Autumn Hillside” — A Utah hillside with autum color from aspens and brush.
The range of colors in this photograph reminds me a little bit — but only a little bit — of the widely diverse autumn colors of New England forests. It is a bit subtler, with lots of softer tones, ranging from the marginal coloration of some of the green plants to the ghostly quality of the leafless brush in the foreground.
The location would usually be considered unremarkable. In fact, we ended up here more or less by accident. While driving a better known route through part of Utah I saw a gravel side road and spontaneously decided to see where it led. We started in a beautiful aspen grove, then climbed up and around a large ridge to west-facing slopes, where we found this autumn color.
“Dormant Wetlands Plants” — Dormant and dried wetlands plants reflected in the still water of a quiet pond.
My first “real” visit of the season to my favorite migratory bird photography location did not go as planned. (Actually, I did stop briefly a month ago and a half earlier, but things were still slow back then.) I was hoping for luminous tule fog and lots of geese and sandhill cranes. Instead I got thick gray elevated overcast and fewer birds than expected. Ah, well, it happens… and when it does I look for something else to photograph.
This is one of the “something else” photographs. This area is full of shallow seasonal ponds, and when they fill the summer’s plants still emerge from the still water and make fascinating reflections. For this subject the very soft light from the overcast worked well and revealed a more of the plants’ details.
“The Wrigley Building” — The Wrigley Building in Chicago.
I photographed Chicago’s famous Wrigley Building while we were out for a walk last November. We were in the city for most of a week, originally to meet up with others, but in the end to explore, eat at interesting places, and attend a couple of concerts. On this day we had walked to the opera house to make sure we’d know where we were going when we attended an upcoming performance, We were looping back from there along the Chicago River when I made the photograph.
When the light is right, I’m bit of a sucker for photographing big buildings like The Wrigley. They feel like they come from a different and perhaps more innocent era, and in Chicago they evoke the “City of Broad Shoulders” heritage of the place.
“Desert Branches” — Branches with sparse foliage, Red Rock Canyon State Park.
This was most definitely not the subject I was looking for at this place. We were on the long drive back to California after a few weeks of photography in Utah when we decided to make a quick stop at the Red Rock Canyon State Park in Southern California. The main visual target there was to be the fantastically eroded formations — that last we would see that felt like the Southwest as we headed home.
We arrived late in the day, just before sunset. Because the hills near the entrance face east, the area was already in the early evening shadows. We photographed the red rock formations in the soft, blue-tinted light, and at some point I happened to spot these sparse plants silhouetted against bright ground in the distance and illuminated by the evening’s bluish light.
Photographer and visual opportunist. Daily photos since 2005, plus articles, reviews, news, and ideas.
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