Location for both pictures: East Entrance Road near Sylvan pass. First picture is looking south towards the Tetons, second picture is looking west over Yellowstone Lake.
I used f/8.0 to give myself a greater depth of field; however, f/11 or even higher may have been more appropriate given the range of distances in the picture. I don't recall if I was in aperture or shutter priority when I took the picture, but I suspect aperture priority with f/8.0 as a compromise between shooting landscapes and shooting wildlife (we were looking for owls at the time I took this picture). There was plenty of light so ISO 100 allowed me to minimize graininess. Shooting directly into the sun, I needed to let a very small amount of light into the camera, hence the relatively fast shutter speed, small aperture of f/14, and ISO 100. I was bracketing my exposures while in aperture priority mode (so my ISO and f-stop stayed constan), and I was happy with the exposure I got with 1/200 shutter speed. The low light was not ideal when shooting this bison. Additionally, the movement of the subject required a fast shutter speed to prevent mo...
Going into the beginning of the semester, I was excited for the class because my experience with photography had consisted of (admittedly enthusiastically) taking tens of thousands of pictures with my smartphone camera and the occasional point-and-shoot, but with limited knowledge of technical aspects and photography techniques. Taking this class definitely gave me some practical basic knowledge in areas like composition, camera function, exposure, and use of editing software like Lightroom. In the realm of composition, I had already known about the rules of thirds, but learned many more practical ones that helped improve my pictures, especially the rules of dominance. Many of them made sense (ex. light drawing more attention than dark or sharpness being more attractive than blur) but some of them were rather enlightening, such as the strong dominance of red, and the importance of diagonals, and played a role both in the picture composition and editing processes. Bef...
I've spent seven of the last eight summers working at Soar Truckee, a glider/soaring operation located at the Truckee-Tahoe Airport just north of Lake Tahoe in California. To limit my commuting (my home is an hour away) I frequently spend the night in the Soar Truckee bunkhouse if I work two days back-to-back. I usually wake up around sunrise in the bunkhouse on those days, and always get great photo opportunities, some of which I'd like to share here. The Truckee airport is located on the floor of the scenic Martis Valley, surrounded by mountains on all sides. Martis Valley is frequently prone to morning fog, due both to its position as a cold air sink, and to its elevation (the airport sits at 5,900 feet, the lowest area in the valley). On the morning of June 19, 2016, I captured some of my favorite photos of the fog when I went for a morning run along the road which leads around the airport perimeter to the gliderport, and continues along to cross a dam which forms the (no...
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