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Archive for November, 2007

Barn, Foresta

Barn, Foresta

Barn, Foresta. Yosemite National Park, California. November 3, 2007. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell

As you drive down toward Yosemite Valley from the northern highway 120 entrance you can see the small village of Foresta below and to your right. Once it was surrounded by forest, and it will be again some day - but now the area is quite bare following a very intense forest fire there a few years ago. I’ve been intrigued by this barn for some time, and I’ve stopped more than once to photograph it.

How Fast Can the Light Change?

Lighting can change a lot at different times of the day, but sometimes it can change so quickly and so radically that it is almost unbelievable.

In July of 2006 I was in Tuolumne Meadows shooting the sunset from the west end of the meadow. Among the photographs I took that evening were the following two - shot from about the same spot within a five minute span:

LembertAlpenglow2006|07|23: Lembert Dome Alpenglow, Tuolumne Meadows. Yosemite National Park. July 23, 2006. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell.    keywords: lembert dome alpenglow tuolumne meadows mount dana dusk sunset yosemite national park color photograph
Lembert Dome Alpenglow, Tuolumne Meadows. Yosemite National Park. July 23, 2006. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell.

TuolumneAlpenglow2006|07|23: Tuolumne Meadows Alpenglow. Yosemite National Park. July 23, 2006. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell.    keywords: tuolumne meadows alpenglow sunset vivid colors lembert dome mount dana yosemite national park color photograph
Tuolumne Meadows Alpenglow. Yosemite National Park. July 23, 2006. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell.

What happened on this evening was a phenomenon that I’ve seen more than once in the Sierra at sunset. On a partly cloudy evening the sun drops towards the horizon and as the sun passes behind the clouds and the color fades you begin to suspect that it will be a mediocre sunset. But then the sun drops to very near the horizon and its light turns red and shines upwards at the bottoms of the clouds to the west and overhead - and the most unimaginable wash of color appears for a few short minutes… and then is gone.

That’s OK, I didn’t believe these colors either and I was standing (crouching, actually) right there as it happened… :-)

Card Corruption - Not “If,” But “When”

A post at The Luminous Landscape today includes the following:

Just as the question with hard drives is not will they fail, but simply, when, a corollary to this is that if you shoot a lot, at least a couple of times a year you’ll end up with a corrupted memory card.

This happened to me yesterday when I was shooting a seminar session being put on at a local studio. When I got back to my own studio in the evening to copy the files to disk, I found that the card was corrupt. I have no idea why, or how it happened, but there it was. My Mac couldn’t even see the card and mount it, and in the camera (Nikon D300) the display said, no directory, no images.

Rather than despair I simply ran PhotoRescue overnight, and this morning had every single file recovered, including every file that had been on the card from my previous shoot, before I had formatted the card in camera yesterday morning. Simply amazing… [The Luminous Landscape - What's New]

I’ll second both points. Like hard drives, memory cards do get corrupted and you need to be prepared for this eventuality. When it happened to me - twice this year- PhotoRescue recovered my photographs from the corrupted cards.

(In my case, as soon as I had tried to download the photos using Adobe Bridge, the files all disappeared and it looked like there was only a single file left on the card! As reported above, PhotoRescue not only recovered the photos that I had just made, but even turned up a bunch of older images on the reformatted card! In the end, my “bad card” was actually a problem with a separate firewire device that I had left connected to the computer.)

Afternoon Shadows, El Capitan Meadow

Afternoon Shadows, El Capitan Meadow

Afternoon Shadows, El Capitan Meadow. Yosemite National Park, California. November 3, 2007. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell

This was not a shot I planned to take. I was in the Valley and on my way to another place where I planned to shoot in the early evening when I drove past this spot and saw the boundary between light and shadow falling across these trees. I quickly pulled over, grabbed my gear, set up the tripod and made a few exposures before the light disappeared.

Night Photography Shows

Andy Frazer posts a round-up of several shows featuring night photography. I especially like the work of Lisa Tyson Ennis.

Half Dome and Oak Branches, Autumn

Half Dome and Oak Branches, Autumn

Half Dome and Oak Branches, Autumn. Yosemite National Park, California. November 4, 2007. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell

A bit of a postcard shot, but sometimes one cannot resist… :-)

Yosemite Valley, Early Evening

Yosemite Valley, Early Evening

Yosemite Valley, Early Evening. Yosemite National Park, California. Novemer 3, 2007. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell.

This is a late afternoon / early evening photograph of a grove of trees beyond a recently-burned meadow, with low-angle light from the far end of the Valley illuminating the trees. Although the colors of the scene were quite interesting (intense greens and some fall foliage, with the saturated late light) I like the more classic quality of the black and white version.

Alison Grippo at Flak Photo

Another interesting Flak Photo image is online, this one by Alison Grippo.

What’s In the Pipeline?

In order to continue posting daily photos, I generally must have a bunch of images “in the pipeline” and ready to post ahead of time. Consequently, the work that appears here was typically shot a few weeks or even a month ago. (The current images from Yosemite were shot during the last weekend of October and the first weekend of November.) Since that time I’ve shot a few other subjects, and they will appear soon: the Getty Center in Los Angeles, a few more of my oak tree photographs from the central California hills, and a series of photos of the Golden Gate bridge that I shot last week.

Save Your Seconds

Jim Goldstein makes a good point about taking a second look at your work:

Always Check Your Seconds - Out of the Gloom II: Golden Gate Bridge and Fog

If there is one thing I’ve learned as a photographer it is always check your seconds. Upon first review of a days shoot I’ll almost always pick out the great shots. There’s a caveat to this though… these great shots are usually in line with a preconceived notion of what I wanted to get from the shoot. Coming back to these same photos later allows me to review my work with a fresh perspective. The end result is usually the discover of a real gem of a photo. Case in point… Jim [JMG-Galleries]

(Follow the link in the excerpt to read the whole thing and see the photo.)

In this regard, I’ve developed an annual ritual of going through all of my photos from the previous year during the holidays. (Trust me, that is a lot of photographs to look at!) I often discover something that I passed over the first time, often for the reason that Jim mentions - it was not in line with my original expectations of the subject. However, when I look at the photo with a bit more objective distance months later I often discover something very interesting and new in these photographs. On a few occasions a photo that originally seemed almost not worth keeping has turned out to be a real gem.

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