Bill McCarthy
Member
Here is a B&W from 2005,
Bill McCarthy: Untitled
2005
I've always liked this tree.
Bill

Bill McCarthy: Untitled
2005
I've always liked this tree.
Bill
Here is a B&W from 2005,
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Bill McCarthy: Untitled
2005
I've always liked this tree.
Bill
Yes, Bill, this is unique. What's happening with the ? fallen tree trunk? Is that what it is?
Asher
From my series "Trees"
Along the trail
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This is a HDR pano.
Asher,
As I recall, it was a limb that fell from the main tree. I remember that I was on a lower spot below the tree and I liked getting a ground level view which for me, gave the tree a majestic and all powerful feel, like a sentinel watching over the rest of the forest. While I don't see my photographs as telling a story, in the eyes and mind of the viewer, (we imagine) there is always something going on. I liked the downed limb because it compositionally created tension with the saplings on the left and anchored me visually in a way that kept me from permanently flying off the page. Thanks for looking.
Bill
Let's find trees in their natural beauty! So this is not for tree-lawn-pruned specimens, although an arboretum (where they really respect the trees shape) would be fine too as they will have remarkable examples, more diverse than we would otherwise be able to find.
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Asher Kelman: Aspens
2008
........ I admire these trees and will return to photograph them again, but with film.
Asher
My beaver pond is full of very busy beasts!
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Bill McCarthy: Beaver Tree
Tracy,
I decided to revisit my initial picture of this series. What I now realize, most important is the contrast between the forms of the white slender trunks and the mass of grass below marked with shadows. It might be that, in close ups like this, either the sky or the ground must be the partner of the trees, not the two of them together. So I've tried cropping away much of the bright sky shining through the leaves.
Then I felt uncomfortable, because some elegance of the aspens had been lost. I returned to the original and then just removed a little sky, just enough to keep one's eyes on the tree trunks.
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Asher Kelman: Aspens
Cropped to reduce element of sky, 2011
What I see now, expresses the mood we felt on this cold evening, high up, above the spring flowers, but below the residual snow of the harsh Colorado winter. This exercise shows how hard it is to present a picture, when one far way from that scene. It's good to shoot wider, I'm decided on that. Still, maybe less is a much richer statement!
Asher
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Here is one from last fall and looking forward to the NC mountain color .
Don
A picture I took long ago:
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