My wife and I just returned from Steamboat Springs, Co. We were on vacation. I had never been there before and was excited about the possibility of some great mountain images. It was cloudy and cold the entire 4 days we were there and our days revolved around our multi-trips to the Steaming Bean for coffee and to check emails. I didn't scout much, the photography this week was more of a "study" in contrast and color and the scouting trips were more down the lines of "Wow!, did you see that?", I exclaimed, as we rounded a curve in the road in our car. "See what?", my wife would say. "We have to turn around, I have to shoot that stand of trees, wow!, what contrast and color!" Driving down the road with me can be a dangerous event. I see photos around every corner, literally, and sometimes, I'm distracted by the way the
light is reflecting, at that moment, off a stand of Aspen trees or the way the light is illuminating the landscape into multiple patterns of light and shadow, color and contrast. Oh, I'm very careful not be distracted when other cars are on the road but Ev gets a little nervous sometimes and I don't blame her. You don't always have to hike for miles to get great photographs and some of my best have been right off the road somewhere.
Most of the time I don't have a clue as to exact location of a shot I've taken by the road, I just know it's "this side of Rabbit Ears Pass off Hwy 9". I should make a stronger effort to look up exact locations and names of mountain ranges that are in the distance of one of my shots but I don't always have the right map adequately describing these particular areas, but I often wished I knew more.
I don't often shoot well known and heavily photographed national monuments, anyway. I'd rather shoot the out of the way "no name" places that have never had their moment of glory with a photo, "virgin territory" one might say! Such as this photo taken on a backstreet in Kremmling, Colorado, pop. 1538, just after sunrise when the temp was only 11 degrees. We were driving through town, on our way home to Albuquerque, and I just noticed this scene as we rounded a curve coming into town. I found a back street, stopped the car, got out setup the camera and took a few.
Not your typical national monument type image but I love the, out of the way, small town, realistic look.
So I didn't get the beautiful "last light" hitting the snowy mountain tops photos this time around and I'll be planning more trips to Colorado just to focus on the photography but I still love what I came back with and it goes to prove that there are photo opportunities literally "everywhere". You just have to look but. . . PLEASE. . . keep one eye on the road when the road is clear and the both eyes on the road when cars are coming.
light is reflecting, at that moment, off a stand of Aspen trees or the way the light is illuminating the landscape into multiple patterns of light and shadow, color and contrast. Oh, I'm very careful not be distracted when other cars are on the road but Ev gets a little nervous sometimes and I don't blame her. You don't always have to hike for miles to get great photographs and some of my best have been right off the road somewhere.Most of the time I don't have a clue as to exact location of a shot I've taken by the road, I just know it's "this side of Rabbit Ears Pass off Hwy 9". I should make a stronger effort to look up exact locations and names of mountain ranges that are in the distance of one of my shots but I don't always have the right map adequately describing these particular areas, but I often wished I knew more.
I don't often shoot well known and heavily photographed national monuments, anyway. I'd rather shoot the out of the way "no name" places that have never had their moment of glory with a photo, "virgin territory" one might say! Such as this photo taken on a backstreet in Kremmling, Colorado, pop. 1538, just after sunrise when the temp was only 11 degrees. We were driving through town, on our way home to Albuquerque, and I just noticed this scene as we rounded a curve coming into town. I found a back street, stopped the car, got out setup the camera and took a few.Not your typical national monument type image but I love the, out of the way, small town, realistic look.
So I didn't get the beautiful "last light" hitting the snowy mountain tops photos this time around and I'll be planning more trips to Colorado just to focus on the photography but I still love what I came back with and it goes to prove that there are photo opportunities literally "everywhere". You just have to look but. . . PLEASE. . . keep one eye on the road when the road is clear and the both eyes on the road when cars are coming.












