Looking at some photography books over Christmas prompted some experimentation with a different black and white process of images from Iceland. Although I rarely try to process color images “as I saw them” (often, for example, applying a gradient of color temperature which is not really a naturalistic thing to do), I do have a tendency to gravitate toward a somewhat neutral look. In black and white it’s easier to push toward something more dramatic, and for this second look at Iceland I’ve played with a much more contrasty look.
A month of sunrises
As fall turned to winter I set up a camera in my office to capture a short time lapse sequence of the first light on the Boulder Flatirons every morning. Over the course of a month there were some spectacular dawns and a handful of my favorite Boulder mornings when the Flatirons are covered in fresh snow. Processed for 4k, if you have the bandwidth and screen for it!
A great day hike in Rago National Park
My first trip to Utah was in 1999, and although there were already plenty of internet sites back then information on even popular hikes was pretty hard to find. As a result my brother and I got to do some of the classic hikes like the Zion Narrows and Angels Landing with only a vague idea of what to expect. That kind of experience is rarer now, when searches for even obscure trails in the US return hundreds of photos, but there’s plenty of wilderness elsewhere with less of an internet presence! Planning a trip to Bodo in arctic Norway last summer – primarily as a base to visit the Lofoten Islands – we noticed that Rago National Park was just a short drive from the town. Rago has one famous sight, the incredible Litlverivassfossen waterfall, and it looked like one could combine the two front-country trails to make a long day hike that looped past the falls. We couldn’t find any web pages that described the loop in detail, so we turned up at the trail head in late July with a map but only a rough idea of the length or difficulty of the hike. It turned out to be one of the best day hikes we’ve done.
The hike starts at the end of the road at the Lakshola trail head, reached by following the E6 north from Fauske and then taking the turn toward Nordfjord which comes immediately after a short tunnel. The road is paved all the way and the trail head is notable for having the fanciest restroom, by far, that I’ve ever seen gracing a wilderness! The first two miles follow the Storskogdalen along a peaceful and surprisingly lush forest. On a pleasant summer Sunday we encountered a pair of locals on this stretch of trail, the only other hikers we met or saw all day. At a bend in the valley the trail crosses a creek (at a spot that’s not entirely obvious on the ground
Sunrise project
Red Rocks, Las Vegas
In Las Vegas last weekend giving a colloquium at the university, before joining friends for a trail marathon through Titus Canyon to finish on the floor of Death Valley. Taking the bus at dawn to the start of the race I was reminded that Death Valley is exceptionally beautiful, and I resolved to return for a longer photo trip than I managed back in 2006. (Titus Canyon is also beautiful, though by the time I got to the best parts at around mile 21 I was more focused on the pain in my muscles!) The day after the race we did a short warm-down hike in Red Rock Canyon just outside Las Vegas. Red Rocks is somewhat reminiscent of Zion, and one can explore the smaller formations off the road pretty much at will. We were there at mid-day but I’m sure there must be good photographic possibilities when the light and weather are co-operative.
Moab
Back to Moab last weekend, though not for the trail 1/2 marathon this year! Instead revisited two of my favorite Utah hikes – the Natural Bridges loop (a great hike in a National Monument, but still almost deserted) and the Fisher towers trail. In Natural Bridges I mostly shot video, while for the Fisher towers I deployed the Fuji for a roll of film. But I also shot a few stills with the 7D and either the 10-22mm or 70-200 lens.
Sunrise project underway
We all know that sunrise is one of the best times of the day for photography, but as far as I’m concerned it’s an even better time for sleeping! Fortunately though my office has a mighty fine view of the Flatirons, and so I’ve set up the camera on a timer (with a Lenskirt) to shoot 120 frames over a 30 minute period at sunrise each day. Week one of this effort has already yielded some good dawns…
This morning I had to field a query from the cleaners – who were worried that turning on the lights to take out the trash might be ruining the images (!) – but apart from that it’s going well. My original plan was to shoot a continuous “month of sunrises”, but maybe a month’s worth of distinct sunrises would be better? (Apart from pure blue sky days they all look different.) In any event I want to continue until Fall is over and we get some snow on the Flatirons, which is always spectacular!
Update
We’re now two weeks in, and about a third of mornings are yielding great sunrises, another third are blue sky days, and the rest are clouded out. No snow yet
Manchester
A day hike into Coyote Gulch
Coyote Gulch is my favorite canyon in the Escalante, and hiking it with Chris last month I thought it would be fun to shoot video as well as stills. I used the amazing Canon 11-24mm f/4 lens for a fair fraction of the shots, which accounts for the sometimes quite distinctive (and distorted!) look. I’m afraid you can also see the limitations of the 5D3’s video – in these very high contrast situations there’s only a limited ability to bring up the shadows before noise starts to be obvious.
Going wide in Coyote Gulch
“Water damage is always negligence” states the LensRentals’ contract, but narrow and sometimes water-filled canyons are ideal places to test out an ultra wide lens! Returning to the Escalante last weekend for a quick hiking trip, I rented the new Canon 11-24mm f/4L. At 11mm on a full-frame camera, it’s the widest rectilinear lens ever manufactured. For regular landscapes 11mm is crazily wide, and not often of much interest, but in the overhanging alcoves of Coyote Gulch it was just right for a dramatic perspective.
A rectilinear lens projects straight lines in the real world into straight lines in the image, but at ultra wide angles it does not (and mathematically cannot) prevent noticeable stretching and distortion of objects towards the edges of the frame. In the image of Jacob Hamblin Arch below, Chris was (I think!) standing upright, though he doesn’t look like that in the image. You need to watch out for such visual cues that “something is not normal”, which can be distracting I think.
More generally, a rectilinear view of such a wide field is often going to give a love-it or hate-it sort of image. I rather like the dramatic perspective 11mm gives of the arch and the canyon but – let’s not pretend here – although this is a spectacular location it’s not really as spectacular in person as it appears in the image.
Of course sometimes 11mm isn’t wide enough! I find the above image to be a bit tight at the edges, and prefer the version below which is a stitch of multiple 11mm frames.
It was tremendous fun playing with the 11-24mm, first in Coyote Gulch and subsequently in Sulphur Creek (a trickier and wetter canyon where the “water damage is always negligence” clause was a bit more worrying). It’s a more practical instrument than I expected, and I was sorrier to see it go than any of the previous lenses I’ve tried out.















