February, 2011


25
Feb 11

Ruminations

I’ve enjoyed posting a lot of photos lately, but I’m starting to think the quality is suffering. The nature of every-day posting is that it removes the process of carefully thinking about the photo, the mental processing.

I will continue to post photos, but on a more leisurely schedule. I hope this will make the experience of coming here better for everyone!

One last daily photo—this is from a couple months ago in Cooking Lake Recreation Area.
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24
Feb 11

Small Pool of Water

I love the way frost grows at the edges of open water.

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23
Feb 11

Drawn Back To Ice

OK, I have to post some more from the trip to Abraham Lake. The ice is too cool to keep to myself.

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21
Feb 11

More Highlight Experimentation

Which do YOU like better? I’ve been going back to some of my older photos and trying this blowing-out-the-highlights thing. It’s a little different, and I’m still not completely sure what I think about it. So today I’m going to post two photos—from the same place, same time, and slightly different compositions.

Here’s the new one that I’m still getting used to:
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Here’s the old one—this is the way things are usually done for landscape photography. I actually put my camera on my tripod, fully extended the tripod, and held it up as high as I could to get some perspective in this shot.
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What do you think?


21
Feb 11

Pendant Preview

Anna mentioned making pendants in a comment on the last blog post I made. This is something we’ve been working on together for a little while, and a few lucky people already own them. This is the first time they’ve been seen online. We’re still working on getting the product photography to a state we’re happy with, but it’s getting close. These pendants have a bit of a glow to them in certain light, and that’s something that’s a little hard to reproduce in a product photo.

In a couple weeks we’re hoping to have a bunch up on our artfire.com store – Boreal Designs.

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19
Feb 11

Reflections in Modeste Creek

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16
Feb 11

Somewhat Abstract Reflections

My mind is whirling with weird scientific names and terms for animal-related phenomena. Who thought Haliaeetus leucocephalus would roll off the tongue nicely? And since when is plastron the bottom of a turtle and not a superhero name? So I’m going to take a quiet moment and post a couple photos.

Both photos are peaceful reflections in Horseshoe Lake, taken a few minutes apart.

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15
Feb 11

Small Mountain Pond

I really wish I could have taken this photo from higher up. Maybe some day I’ll go back with a stepladder or something. But I still kind of like the photo.

Not sure if there will be photos tomorrow or the day after – my Wildlife Biodiversity and Ecology midterm is coming up quick, and lots of memorization is involved.

A small pond in Jasper National Park.
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14
Feb 11

The Mixing of the Waters

This is where glacial melt-water was flowing into a spring-fed pond in Jasper National Park.

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13
Feb 11

Ethereal Landscapes

Often in landscapes I try to get all the details visible – lots of contrast, but with the blacks never going totally black and the whites never getting so bright they lose detail. Sometimes though, it pays to blow out the highlights. This is one of those things that’s irreversible in an image, and can look bad, so you have to be sure about it. But when it works it can add a mood to a photo that won’t be there otherwise. This is something I’ve seen done in lomo photography, wedding photography and some fashion photography for a long time, but I’ve never really tried it for landscapes. Curtis Round, another photographer who I’ve often had the pleasure of shooting with, has inspired me over the last few years. He often does this kind of thing in his wedding and engagement shoots, and it looks great.

Taken in Johnston Canyon, Banff.
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