New Ebook - Lessons from the Landscape: Yellowstone National Park

I am happy to announce my newest ebook, Lessons from the Landscape: Yellowstone National Park, which includes an almost entirely new portfolio of photographs, eleven personal essays, and six practical case studies. This is my most personal project yet, and I am excited to share it with you.

You can get the ebook for the discounted price of $19.95 through Tuesday, September 14. See below for more details.

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Badlands from Above: New Photos and Thoughts on Drone Photography

A few years ago, we added a drone (a DJI Mavic Pro 2) to our photography kit and I have come to have a love/hate relationship with it. To begin with the love, it is an incredible piece of technology - a flying camera that can take sharp photos with exposure times of more than a second in calm conditions. This is worth saying again so we can spend a few seconds marveling together: a flying camera that is affordable enough to add to a nature photography kit! Wow! And it is about the size of a Nalgene water bottle when folded up. Wow again!

One of the things I enjoy most about aerial photography with a drone is how the resulting photos tell a totally different story than the one you experience when walking across the same landscape (if you can, in fact, walk across it). For example, in the photos below, you will see many tiny channels. These channels feel individually consequential when you walk up one of them but then become an extensive sea of branching watercourses when seen from the air. One individual channel becomes only a tiny part of a massive network from this alternative perspective. Every time we use a drone for aerial photography in addition to our typical land-based photography, I walk away with a much greater appreciation for the area and have more context for how different parts of a landscape fit and flow together.

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Ron's Recent Work from Colorado and Utah

Sarah and I recently returned from a trip to Zion National Park. With our self-contained trailer it is remarkably easy to stay away from people, which we managed to do for the entire trip, our only visits up the main canyon were on bike. Prior to Zion we photographed fall colors here and there around our home in southwest Colorado. Here’s a selection of my photographs from that period, you can see the full gallery here, which includes over forty new photographs.

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Free Recorded Webinars for Nature Photographers from Nature Photo Guides

Over the last few months, I have recorded six free webinars for nature photographers in partnership with photography friends (David Kingham, Jennifer Renwick, John Barlcay, Cole Thompson, Alister Benn, Alex Noriega, and TJ Thorne). This post collects all of these recordings in a single place for easy access and viewing. You can access the recordings through the links to our YouTube channel or find the embedded videos below.

Offering these webinars has been a highlight during a difficult time and it was so nice to connect with photographers across the globe through these sessions. After taking a break from offering webinars to finish my 11 Composition Lessons ebook, I will be starting these sessions up again soon in some to-be-determined format. If you have a topic in mind that you would like to see covered in a future webinar, please let me know.

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Ron's Recent Work from Death Valley

Sarah and I spent most of February in Death Valley in our Airstream until eventually the busy weekend crowds drove us away. Despite Death Valley’s increasing popularity it is still possible to avoid the crowds if you explore lesser known areas of the park, including the numerous canyons which have been the focus of our last few trips to Death Valley, and feature prominently in this collection.

This is only a small selection of my photos from our last trip, please see my recent work Death Valley gallery for the complete fifty photograph collection.

“Curves” - Shadow and light and blowing sand mingle.

“Curves” - Shadow and light and blowing sand mingle.

“Proud Pygmy” - A Pygmy Cedar against a glowing canyon wall.

“Proud Pygmy” - A Pygmy Cedar against a glowing canyon wall.

“Sand Waves” - Sand patterns that are revealed for a few moments when the sun is low in the horizon.

“Sand Waves” - Sand patterns that are revealed for a few moments when the sun is low in the horizon.

“Spray Paint” - Natural graffiti adorns this rock in the Panamint Mountains.

“Spray Paint” - Natural graffiti adorns this rock in the Panamint Mountains.

“Ghosts” - Drifts of sand blowing in the howling wind

“Ghosts” - Drifts of sand blowing in the howling wind

“Beamed” - A sunbeam briefly lights up an alluvial fan.

“Beamed” - A sunbeam briefly lights up an alluvial fan.

“Winding Canyon” - Reflected light in a remote canyon.

“Winding Canyon” - Reflected light in a remote canyon.

“Sand Storm” - Dust and sand from high winds revealed this layers of the Panamint Mountains.

“Sand Storm” - Dust and sand from high winds revealed this layers of the Panamint Mountains.

“Tortured” - A gnarled and twisted remote canyon wall more resembling driftwood than rock.

“Tortured” - A gnarled and twisted remote canyon wall more resembling driftwood than rock.

“Rock Candy” - A potpourri of colors and shapes

“Rock Candy” - A potpourri of colors and shapes