Photo Friday: Grass Abstract

Happy Friday!  Photo Friday today is a black and white abstract of grasses.  While out taking a small walk through the OPPD Arboretum, I came across this grass that had been flattened from a large animal (likely a deer) resting or sleeping on it.  I was drawn to the lines and patterns, the swirls and the contrasts.

Technical Details:
Canon G10, 8.9mm, f/4.5, 1/200 sec.
OPPD Arboretum, Omaha, Nebraska

Photo Friday: Around the Tree

Prairie grass is fascinating to watch, especially when one is standing in miles of it.  Acting as one connected organism, groups of prairie grass move and sway in unison with even the smallest of breezes.  A quiet rustling accompanies the movement, gentle, calming.  On the prairie one can find peace and solitude with miles of nothing and nobody.  The vastness is engulfing and liberating, making one feel both small and large simultaneously.  It is endless and eternity.

Technical Details:
Canon 5D Mark II, 300 f/4l + 1.4tc, f/9, 1/60 sec.
Chalco Hills Recreation Area, Nebraska

Photo Friday: The Cold Land

I went out and used my new 24mm Tilt-Shift lens this past week.  On today’s image, however, I did not tilt, nor shift, I only used it as a 24mm lens to take advantage of the sharpness that the lens has to offer.  I love the stark white interspersed with the grasses and the various patterns that emerge which fresh snow on the plains bring.

Technical Details:
Canon 5D Mark II, 24mm TS-E 3.5L, f/11, 1/30 sec.
Jack Sinn Wildlife Management Area, Nebraska

Photo Friday: Winter Prairie Sunset

Last week I mentioned that I have given myself two challenges this year.  One is to create more black and white photographs.  The other is to become familiar and master the nuances of my new 24mm TS-E II f/3.5L Canon Tilt-Shift lens.  In college I had the opportunity to use a medium format view camera and with that equipment I had access to tilting mechanisms that allowed modification of the plane of focus.  In this post I will not go into how it works, the Scheimpflug principals, etc., (See this article for that) but sufficed to say view camera landscape photographers have been using this function for years to get everything in focus from near to far with a large aperture.  So what are the pros and cons, why did I decide to purchase this lens, and for what work do I plan to use it?

(Read on for more!)

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Postcards: More Marketing Than Art

Photograph - Good Tidings

Climb the mountains and get their good tidings.
 -John Muir

When I was a wee lad and I visited the National Parks with my family, we would stop into a gift shop at some point on our trip to pick up a souvenir of our visit.  I would normally gravitate to the postcard racks, rotating each over and over again perusing each sets of cards.  I’m sure I bothered several other shoppers as these racks were usually quite old and as such and they usually squeaked and creaked their objection to my movements.  I would carefully select the card that I thought exemplified the beauty of the place, take my change, count it out and then take it to the counter to be bagged. 

With each purchase, my dream of photography began to form, I realized that not only did I want to visit the beautiful locations portrayed, but I wanted to share a slice of what I had witnessed with everyone.  What better way than with postcards?  

I began to carefully study these slices of “art”, their composition, their colors.  On my little point and shoot film camera I would frame similar photographs and dream of the day when my photographs graced the glossy surface of postcards. 

As I got older and my art evolved, I started to study books of photography, the works of the masters, and images from the intrepid explorers of the wilderness.  Older and more experiences, I returned to these parks and realized that many postcards were mid-day shots with simple compositions.  In many places, the only differentiation between the cards was the season!  Where were the shots of the setting sun with brilliant underlit clouds?  Where were the images of thousands of stars above a mountain?  Where were the photographs of the waves breaking across the rocks while a rainbow rocked in the background?

For the most part, these types of cards were nonexistent.  I knew these shots existed, but why were they not the predominant faces of these cards?  For a simple reason – those shots are not good marketing.  Postcards are many things: a way to communicate to home to brag, “Look where I am and you are not!”, a reminder of a good vacation, and a pretty picture, but above all else they are pieces of marketing.  Clever pieces at that – where else can someone print a picture on card stock and then make you pay for the postage to advertise a location?  So why would stunning photographs make even better marketing?  Because postcard printers want icons as they look to the majority of people and the majority of people do not stand out in inclement weather hoping for stunning light, they do not spend hours in the fog hoping for a moody image, and they do not get up before sunrise.  The common traveler on vacation sleeps in, eats breakfast, hits the main iconic locations around mid-day and they’re back for dinner and a cocktail.  Only the intrepid photographers, artists, and nature lovers find themselves out in during the times of most incredible lighting and beauty.  Postcard printers know this and target this audience.  Does this mean they never have the postcard of the iconic beauty in incredible light?  No, they will, but it will be surrounded by images of blue sky and direct overhead sun and for the most part the mid-day sun photographs are the ones that sell.

So what of my dream of sending my images to postcard publishers?  There are those that prefer those photographs and those are the ones to target.   That doesn’t exclude  calendar publishers, puzzle manufacturers, poster printers, etc. that might want that type of image.  That doesn’t mean that I’m going to sleep in on my next excursion, however.  I’ll still be out before sunrise, in inclement weather and fog, hoping for some incredible light.  The blue mid-day sky isn’t the limit!

Technical Details:
Tundra, Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado
Canon 5D Mark II, 17-40 f/4l @ 17mm, 3-stop ND Grad, 2-stop ND Grad, 2 images blended

The Return of Photo Friday and a 2011 Challenge

Photograph - Aloneness

This year I am adding two major challenges.  One is mastering a piece of hardware that is now in my possession which I’m going to leave you guessing on until I actually get a chance to use it.  The second is to work on making more black and white images.  When I first started seriously in photography, all I made were black and white photographs.  I used to carry a camera containing only TRI-X and T-Max Kodak film and that it what I used to make images.  I slowly moved into color slide film, but I still would carry a camera with black and white film.  Once I went to my first digital SLR, a Canon 20D, I figured I could make black and white images whenever I wanted.  Guess what?  I rarely did.  This year I am challenging myself to make at least 20 black and white images that I will present on this blog.  I’m excited for these new challenges and what new experiences they may bring!

Technical Details:
Canon 5D Mark II, 17-40 f/4l @ 17mm, f/11, 1/125 sec., Polarizer
Toadstool Geologic Park, Nebraska

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