Welcome. This blog will try to keep you up to date on my adventures in photography, I appreciate any feedback you might want to offer. I'll be publishing blog posts as a new adventure warrants, focusing on one or two particular images from an excursion to some cool place that I've visited.

 

Big Sur

May 18, 2012  •  1 Comment

 

Big Sur is one of those places I could return to again and again and never tire of. The coastline is phenomenally rugged, craggy and drop-dead gorgeous. At Pfeiffer Beach, there's an archway in a giant shoreline rock formation that funnels shafts of golden light through from the setting sun around the Winter Solstice. At Julia Pfeiffer-Burns State Park, there's a picture-postcard waterfall that comes spilling out of a high bluff overlooking the Pacific. At the same location, giant waves pound the peninsula known as "The Saddle," exploding into an enormous white cloud of sea spray. At Andrew Molera State Park, old-growth sycamores grace the skyline with their beautifully intricate and shapes, and at Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park ancient giant redwoods stand majestically in old-growth forests. And of course there are places like Garrapata Beach, Pfeiffer Beach and Rocky Point where you can catch wonderful sunsets with sea stacks and boulder-strewn beaches in your foreground.

I've included a few images here to try to give you a good sense of the place should you want to visit for the first time. If you've already been fortunate enough to visit Big Sur, perhaps you'll find something among these images that inspires you to return again for one more potential gallery shot. My personal favorites are the ones I took at Pfeiffer Beach of "The Golden Portal" and "Seastacks at Sunset." At Garrapata Beach, my favorites are of  "Calla Lilly Heaven" and "Garrapata at Sunset."

The image "Calla Lilly Heaven" taught me that I'm most likely immune to poison oak, because I was walking through it on my way to get this shot in the creek bed. "Seastacks at Sunset" definitely taught me never to give up hope. I had been chasing a good sunset shot in Big Sur four evenings in a row to no avail — an impenetrable evening fog bank on the horizon would swallow up the sun before it could color the sky. But on my last night in Big Sur, I got the feeling I needed to head to Pfeiffer Beach. The few of us on the beach waiting for a show were not disappointed, as you'll see by this image.

Always carry a 2- or 3-stop neutral density graduated filter with you when you're preparing for sunset shots, or be ready to spend some time in post-processing by taking multiple exposures of the same scene — one for the terrain and one exposing the sky properly — to tame the dynamic range of high-contrast scenes.

Have a blast.McWay Falls, Big Sur, CaliforniaBigSur_PtLobos_1163


Oregon Coast

March 18, 2012  •  Leave a Comment

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The Oregon Coast is crazy full of opportunities for anyone packing a camera. During a five-day visit there in early March 2012, I traveled up and down the coast between Astoria and Bandon hypnotized by the beauty of the rocky coastline, the gorgeous light at sunset and sunrise, the rapidly shifting transitions from storms to sunshine, the old-growth forests and the variety of shorebirds.

 

In Cannon Beach, I had the good fortune of hanging out with renowned nature photographer Art Wolfe as he led a workshop in and around Cannon Beach. Keeping up with Art is no small task, especially after he’s had his morning coffee. Art challenged all of us to see everything from the small details to the grand vistas wherever we went. We had to be ready to abandon plans and locations for new ones according to the changing light. With Art, the image reigns supreme, and if the light wasn’t right in one location, we had to pack it in and speed off to another more promising location in a heartbeat. It was fun and frantic. Art’s critiques alone were worth their weight in gold. After 30 years of photography, Art can size up ways to improve an image quicker than you can screw a circular polarizer onto a lens.

 

After Cannon Beach, I headed south to Bandon, where, in my opinion, the sea stack formations offshore are the best on the Oregon Coast. During this trip, I was fortunate to photograph some very colorful sunsets and sunrises, and the setting of a full moon above the sea stacks in Bandon left me breathless.

 

Technically as well as artistically, it was a very challenging trip that I know helped me grow as a photographer. My next stop is Big Sur, another beautiful coastline for me to aim my camera at. You can view all my new Oregon Coast images in the "featured galleries" section of my Web page:

www.chasingthelight.zenfolio.com. Or just click the "Home" at the top of this page.

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