Quantcast
Channel: reflection – Eloquent Images by Gary Hart
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 79

Every. Single. Thing.

$
0
0
Gary Hart Photography: Sunset Reflection, North Lake, Eastern Sierra

Sunset Reflection, North Lake, Eastern Sierra (2008)
Canon EOS-1Ds Mark III
Canon 17-40 f/4 L
10 seconds
F/11
ISO 200

A few days ago, while browsing old images looking for something else, I came upon this one from a solitary sunset visit to North Lake above Bishop almost 16 years ago. It’s a great reminder to appreciate my past efforts, and to not forget that, even though some images from my distant photography past evoke a “What was I thinking?” face palm, I really did have an idea of what I was doing—even if my execution wasn’t always perfect.

One of the earliest lessons I learned on this path to where I am as a photographer today, a lesson I work hard to impart on my workshop students, is the photographer’s responsibility for each square inch (and pixel) in the frame. Not just the beautiful elements, but everything else as well. Every. Single. Thing.

It’s always heartening to see the genesis of that approach in my older images. Rather than just framing and clicking the obvious, I can see signs that I took the time and effort to assemble the best possible image. That assembly process might start weeks or months before I arrive (planning for a moonrise, fall color, the Milky Way, and so on), or it could simply be a matter of making the best of whatever situation I’m presented when I arrive.

Either way, once it’s time to take out the camera and get to work, before clicking the shutter I try to make a point of surveying the scene to identify its most compelling elements. Once I’m comfortable with the possibilities, I position myself to create the ideal relationships between the various elements, then frame the scene to eliminate distractions, and finally, choose the exposure variables that achieve the motion, depth, and light that create the effect I want. And while my execution still isn’t always perfect (and will always have room for improvement), I think this image in particular illustrates my assembly process.

I’ve been visiting North Lake in autumn for nearly 20 years, both on my own and in my workshops. Most of these visits come at sunrise, but this time, by myself in Bishop with an evening between workshops, I decided to explore some of my favorite spots near the top of Bishop Creek Canyon. I pulled into North Lake and was surprised to find it completely devoid of photographers—a refreshing difference from the customary autumn sunrise photographer crowds that usually outnumber the mosquitos.

Early enough to anticipate the sunset conditions and plan my composition, I was especially excited by the western sky above the peaks, which was smeared with broken clouds that just  might (fingers crossed) color up when the sun’s last rays slipped through. Without the swarm of photographers I was accustomed to here, I took full advantage of the freedom to roam the lakeshore in search of a composition that would do the (potential) sunset justice. Rather than simply settle for the standard version of this inherently beautiful scene that might be further enhanced by a nice sunset, I wanted a composition that assembled the best of the scene’s various features—colorful sunset sky, serrated peaks, golden aspen, crisp reflection, small granite boulders—into coherent relationships that allowed everything to work together that might be a little different.

Gary Hart Photography: Autumn Reflection, North Lake, Eastern Sierra

Autumn Reflection, North Lake, Eastern Sierra

I eventually rock-hopped to this mini granite archipelago near the lake’s outlet and found what I was looking for. Since I’d always gone horizontal at North Lake to feature the arc of peaks framing the aspen-lined lake, this time I decided to emphasize the foreground rocks and reflection with a vertical composition. (I’ve since had great success with vertical frames at North Lake, but this is the one that really opened my eyes to the vertical possibilities here—see the image on the right from two years later.)

First I positioned myself so the line of small granite rocks formed a diagonal along the bottom half of the frame, enhancing the scene’s illusion of depth. Next, I lowered my camera (on a tripod, of course) to minimize the empty patch of lake between the rocks and reflection.

As much as I like my images to have uncluttered borders, in nature it’s often impossible to avoid cutting something off, or to prevent a small piece of an object outside the frame from jutting in (like a rock or branch). In this case, from my chosen location, including the foreground rocks I considered essential meant cutting off other rocks. When I run into these situations where a clean border is impossible, I at least need to make my border choice very deliberate. In this case, I took care to include all of the rocks at the bottom, but chose to cut the rocks on the left boldly, right down the middle, so they don’t look like an afterthought (or a never-thought).

As much as I liked the mountain, aspen, and sunset parts of the reflection, I found the reflection of the sky above the colorful clouds pretty dull. So I dialed my polarizer just enough to erase the bland part and reveal the (more interesting) submerged rocks near the lakeshore, taking care not to lose the best part of the reflection.

Of course, including the nearby rocks added another layer of complication: ensuring that everything, from the foreground rocks to the distant mountains, was sharp. Because every image has only one perfectly sharp plane of focus, in a scene like this, finding the right focus point and f-stop is essential.

Of the various techniques photographers apply to ensure proper focus, Hyperfocal focusing is the most reliable. Hyperfocal focusing determines the combination of focal length, f-stop, sensor size, and focus point that ensures the ideal position and depth of the frame’s zone of “acceptable” sharpness. Since identifying the precise hyperfocal point (the point of maximum depth of field) requires plugging variables into a chart (the old fashioned way) or smartphone app (the smart way), many photographers foolishly decide it’s not worth the effort. But, like most things that start out difficult, regularly applying hyperfocal focus technique soon reveals its underlying simplicity. (I rarely have to check my app anymore, usually relying instead on experience-based seat-of-the-pants hyperfocal focusing.)

Today, with my mirrorless cameras, I am able to precisely position my focus point using a magnified viewfinder view, and I completely trust my camera’s autofocus. But because the evening of this image was back in my DSLR days, when I never completely trusted autofocus when the margin for error was small, I know I manually focused it.

So where did I focus? Well, even though I no longer remember, I’d bet money that it was on first small rock beyond the trio of rocks at the bottom. I think that because, 1) that just seems like where I’d instinctively focus, and 2) my hyperfocal app tells me that the hyperfocal distance for this image’s settings (thank you EXIF data) was a little less than 3 feet, and that rock was about 3 feet away. Since close scrutiny at 100 percent confirms that the image is sharp from front to back, I’m pretty confident that’s where I focused.

The final piece of the puzzle was exposure. At the time I was shooting with a dynamic range limited (compared to my Sony Alpha cameras) Canon 1DSIII, so I’m pretty sure I used a 3-stop soft graduated neutral density filter to subdue the bright sky. (FYI, I no longer carry a GND.) This always requires a little extra work in Photoshop because I hate, hate, hate the GND transition’s darkening effect on the landscape immediately beneath the sky, which always requires a little dodging and burning to eliminate.

There really was a lot going on in this scene, and I’m pretty pleased that I was able to make everything work together. Of course that doesn’t always happen, but I find the more I’m able to consider every single thing in a scene, the happier I am with my results.

Workshop Schedule || Purchase Prints || Instagram


Image Building

Click any image to scroll through the gallery LARGE

Gary Hart Photography: Autumn Morning, North Lake, Eastern Sierra Gary Hart Photography: Grand View, Sunrise at Grandview Point, Grand Canyon Gary Hart Photography: First Snow, El Capitan, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Autumn Light, North Rim, Grand Canyon Gary Hart Photography: New Zealand Rocks, Lake Pukaki Gary Hart Photography: Sunset Reflection, North Lake, Eastern Sierra Gary Hart Photography: Sky on Fire, Lake Wakatipu, New Zealand Gary Hart Photography: Cascade, Grand Canyon Gary Hart Photography: Spring Cascade, Tamarack Creek, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Twin Falls, Ribbon Fall and Bridalveil Fall, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Autumn Reflection, North Lake, Eastern Sierra Gary Hart Photography: Frosted, Cathedral Rocks from El Capitan Bridge, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Winter Twilight, Vestrahorn, Iceland Gary Hart Photography: Twilight on Ice, Glacier Lagoon, Iceland Gary Hart Photography: Day's End, Cape Royal, Grand Canyon Gary Hart Photography: Winter Glow, El Capitan, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Sunset on the Rim, Desert View, Grand Canyon Gary Hart Photography: Golden Sunset, Lake Wakatipu, New Zealand Gary Hart Photography: Before the Sun, South Tufa, Mono Lake Gary Hart Photography: Autumn Chill, North Lake Reflection, Eastern Sierra Gary Hart Photography: Rainy Day Poppy, Sierra Foothills, California Gary Hart Photography: Sunset Fire, Olmsted Point, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Sunset Mirror, Valley View (El Capitan and Bridalveil Fall), Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Peaceful Reflection, Hawaii Tropical Botanical Garden, Hawaii Gary Hart Photography: Rocks and Autumn Leaves, Valley View Reflection, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Sunset and Trees, Half Dome from Sentinel Dome, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Bridalveil Dogwood, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Beams of Gold, Desert View, Grand Canyon Gary Hart Photography: Surf's Up, Puna Coast, Hawaii Gary Hart Photography: Spring Sunrise, Memaloose Overlook, Columbia River Gorge, Oregon Gary Hart Photography:Day's End, Ke'e Beach, Hawaii Gary Hart Photography: Sun and Surf, Dyrhólaey, Iceland Gary Hart Photography: Backlit Poppies, Folsom, California Gary Hart Photography: Magenta Moonrise, Yosemite Valley, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Reflection on the Rocks Gary Hart Photography: Autumn Spiral, Bridalveil Creek, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Dancing Poppy, Sierra Foothills, California Gary Hart Photography: Morning Light, Wildflowers and Upper Yosemite Fall from Sentinel Dome, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Nature's Garden, Deer Creek Fall, Grand Canyon Gary Hart Photography: Half Dome and Tenaya Creek, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Sunset, Hopi Point, Grand Canyon Gary Hart Photography: Poppy Pastel, Sierra Foothills, California Gary Hart Photography: Sunset Palette, Half Dome from Sentinel Dome, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Incoming Storm, Mesquite Flat Dunes, Death Valley Gary Hart Photography: Falling Snow, El Capitan, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Autumn Evening, El Capitan, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Autumn Swirl, Half Dome, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Spring in the Foothills, Sierra Foothills, California Gary Hart Photography: Moongazing, Face Rock, Bandon, Oregon

Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 79

Latest Images

Trending Articles



Latest Images