Dave Luttmann
New member
A good friend recently completed a 50 mile run in this region. Got me thinking about a photo excursion I did and the series I completed here and in some of the slit canyons. Here’s one from Horseshoe on a cloudy day
I appreciate very much these details. It allows you to get marvelous detail. Ansel Adams would work on this for three months and 10 years later would go back and start over. This has so much potential for asking you, the creator new questions each time you return to it.Sigma 10mm on APSC camera…three panel vertical stitch. Processed in Lightroom, Photoshop and Analog Effects. Stitch with PTGui. I have a series of B&W from slit canyons that I have exhibited. I’ll share them soon.
There is a parking lot off the road. You hike up a hill and then back down again. Not far…few hundred yards. When I was there, you could walk right up to the cliff edge and lean over. For a few shots, I extended myself when lying down so I was slightly over the edge while a couple of people held my ankles.I appreciate very much these details. It allows you to get marvelous detail. Ansel Adams would work on this for three months and 10 years later would go back and start over. This has so much potential for asking you, the creator new questions each time you return to it.
I am looking forward to you sharing more of the series. Did you have to hike and climb much to get this view?
Asher
Smart to have safety of helpers. A number of times on narrow ledges, I have been so “into the scene” and my composition, that I have moved the tripod forward 10”, almost to an unrecoverable drop!There is a parking lot off the road. You hike up a hill and then back down again. Not far…few hundred yards. When I was there, you could walk right up to the cliff edge and lean over. For a few shots, I extended myself when lying down so I was slightly over the edge while a couple of people held my ankles.
See above: Sigma 10mm on APSC camera…three panel vertical stitch.What lens??