After returning from the South Lake area we stopped for
lunch at Schat’s bakery, in Bishop. It
is a huge bakery making sandwiches, cakes, cookies and all sorts of breakfast
goodies. We picked up sandwiches,
relaxed a bit before starting on the road to our next destination; the Ancient
Bristlecone Pine Forest.
Friday, November 28, 2014
Saturday, November 22, 2014
Eastern Sierra Workshop part 3
After the early morning shooting at the Alabama Hills we
stopped for breakfast. While it was not
cold this morning it still felt good to stop, sit down and have something warm
to eat and drink. From there we returned
to Bishop, our home base for the night. After
a short break to get our stuff together we went into the South Lake area of the Inyo National Forest.
Labels:
aspens,
Eastern Sierra,
fall color,
long exposures,
Workshop
Sunday, November 16, 2014
Eastern Sierra Workshop part 2
Mobius Arch |
The first afternoon we met Jack and Guy Tal, accomplished landscape
photographer and second instructor for this workshop.
After introductions we started learning about landscape
photography, composition, becoming familiar with your location, tell stories
with your images along with many other topics.
This is not an “Okay everybody set your aperture to XXX and shutter to
XXX and shoot” workshop.
Labels:
Alabama Hills,
Eastern Sierra,
Guy Tal,
Jack Graham,
Workshop
Tuesday, November 11, 2014
Eastern Sierra Landscape Photography Workshop (part 1 of ??)
For those of you that have been following this blog, just a
few, and I thank you, I will be including photos from the landscape photography
workshop I took in mid October. In
addition to the course content I was hoping for fall color, and got it! As usual I will incorporate some history and
geography or general insight along with the images.
I have been adding photos of my hikes around north central
New Mexico for quite some time showing some of the beauty and diverse
landscape. I certainly have not seen
very much of New Mexico at this point but I am having fun making the
effort. I have always felt that I am and
adequate photographer. My images seem to
‘document’ NM with little artistic style.
I have been following different photography blogs for some time, see all
kinds of spectacular landscape photography and wish to advance my photography. While I may not approach the talent of these
photographers I have a lot of room for improvement, hence the workshop.
I am a regular subscriber to Outdoor Photographer magazine,
which inspires me every time I open the cover.
In the back there are many experienced photographers offering
workshops. I looked through many ads and
websites looking for the one that suited my interest. Jack
Graham’s 20th Annual Eastern Sierra Photo Workshop caught my
eye. His website and subsequent talking
with him made my decision on a workshop easy.
The small class, 14, with two instructors and his mantra; Learn to See,
Learn to Think, Learn to Create are what I am looking for. I am not compensated for my plug of the
workshop, I am a very satisfied student and if you are on the fence regarding a
photo workshop I heartily suggest going, but definitely research first.
Alabama Hills |
The first image is from the Alabama
Hills Recreation Area outside of Lone Pine, CA. We started early that day to be in position
to catch sunrise on Mt. Whitney, the highest summit in the contiguous United
States.
I will be adding stories about my experiences along with a
few images.
Enjoy
Thank you for stopping by,
Mark
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