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"El Capitan, Horsetail Falls, Merced River"
"Jed Johnson Sunset"
"Day's End"
"Cathedral Rocks"
"Valley of Fire"
"Merced River, Golden Light"
"Bear Butte, Thunderstorm Panorama"
"Badlands Black and White"
"Ft. Phantom Hill Sunset"
"Half Dome from Inspiration Point"
"Sunset Gateway"
"Red Ridge, Yosemite Valley"
"Wichita Morning"
"Wichita Grazing Herd"
Following Ansel's procedures but not his footsteps we worked to produce an image using a combination of several types of light in a single photograph
An unusual sunset appears over Jed Johnson Lake in the Wichita Mountains National Refuge
The sun sets over a ranch acreage near Guthrie, Oklahoma
One of the granite formations illuminated by alpenglow in the Yosemite National Park
This Nevada State Park contains some of the most unusual sandstone formations I've ever seen. This image was taken as a thunderstorm approached one of the most colorful ridges in the park.
A backlit scene of the Merced River in Yosemite National Park
A thunderstorm moves away from Bear Butte in the Black Hills of South Dakota
As Ansel Adams said, "the only way to appreciate the texture of this land is to remove the distraction of color". So in many cases I've done exactly that....
Seven chimneys are all that is left of the Officers Quarters at a 19th century fort near Abilene, Texas.
Probably the most photographed scene in America. In fact, it is so ovedone I nearly didn't shoot it. I finally settled on a 300mm lens and composed a panorama to do something a little different.
One of our favorite panoramas, this sunset was taken in the Callahan Divide near Abilene, Texas. The little town I was near is appropriately called View, Texas
I used my 500mm lens to detail the ridgelines at sunset in Yosemite Valley, California. This is a three-panel panorama.
Not a photographic or Photoshop trick, an unusual gold tint colors the morning sky over the Wichita Mountains near Lawton, Oklahoma
A herd of buffalo grazes near Mt. Roosevelt in the Wichita Mountains National Wildlife Refuge.
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"El Capitan, Horsetail Falls, Merced River"
Following Ansel's procedures but not his footsteps we worked to produce an image using a combination of several types of light in a single photograph





