Sunsets

I've seen a lot of them. Some have been blah or so-so. Most have been stereotypical but rarely over the top.

On Saturday Jan 18 my wife and I went out for a drive. We went down to Nanton, Ab. Then headed west to Black Diamond and Turner Valley. While walking around Black Diamond after a visit to the Blue Rock Gallery, there was a really nice chinook arc just to the west of us. Time to head back home. We went through Turner Valley and the curiosity of flood damage got the better of me. That's when it happened. The blanket of red. Not just the sky, but everything.

This sunset fell into the category of over the top. Well over. The photos of this I tried with my SLR I haven't taken a look at just yet. But I am extremely happy I had my phone with me to at least record what we were seeing. And that's where these photos are from. My phone. Unedited. Enjoy. I sure did.

image.jpg

The Parks (maybe…)

Back in the summer my wife and I had a an awesome trip to Yellowstone and the Grand Tetons. This was the second time we had gone here. Our first visit to the park was only for a day and a half, kinda silly sounding I know. It was apart of a 3 week, roughly 8000km road trip we took for our 10th anniversary.

After being there for just a few hours we quickly knew our allotted time was not nearly enough. We had to keep in mind we were treating it more as a recon trip to see of where we would like to go for longer in the future. Other than Yellowstone we went to Zion, Death Valley, Sequoia, Yosemite, Kings Canyon, San Francisco, Jedediah Smith Redwood State Park, and continued up the coast to Astoria, Or, Seattle then home. They are all amazing places and want to go back to each one some time and spend some proper time at each. In the end, it seems that Yellowstone had topped the list for both of us.

With that trip, along with some other shorter ones and with living relatively close to a good selection of National, Provincial and State parks. I have collected a good amount of photographs for a series I will be sharing soon. I'm still tossing a name around but leaning towards something simple like

The Parks - where man communes with the maker

I am equally excited with this one as I am about my Abandoned Alberta series. Here is a teaser for the upcoming series: Wild Goose Island, Glacier National Park, MT

Wild Goose Island, Glacier National Park, MT

Wild Goose Island, Glacier National Park, MT

The results of deep and forward

In my last post I mentioned about being stuck in waist deep snow while people drive on past. This week I would like to share what I was making while getting both legs cemented in the deep.

This photo was again born of 3 photographs taken vertically and stitched together. All were regular exposures. It's a bit if an experiment I am trying to get more from less (possibly more on the experiment in a later post). It's also photo I am considering for my Abandoned Alberta series:

Left.jpg

a series documenting the old and decrepit farms, houses, barns, etc, that are spread across the rural landscape of Alberta. If only these walls could speak…

A number of years ago I started that series, but with a lack of direction it quickly became stagnant . Unsure how to move forward I let it sit for a while, maybe too long. Over the past two years I have been fine tuning how I would like to show these "forgotten" areas that litter the Albertan landscape and after countless hours and thousands of kilometres I am almost ready.

Those who see me know I've been talking about the update to my site for far far too long. And probably have given up on me actually doing it (I was close to one of them). But I am happy to say that in the coming weeks there will be a new site, with new portfolios and a new overall look to it. I'm quite excited about it.

Thats all for now. Thanks for reading.

-Kris

My first winter shoot of the season (part two)

On Christmas Day I posted a little blurb about my first winter shoot of the season. Along with that I posted an iPhone photo of the scene. Well turns out that was the only thing I shot on our trip to my wife's parents for xmas. I wanted to shoot a bit more but circumstance didn't allow for it, no big deal.

Move forward to today and I finally got around to processing the handful of photos I made while I was there. The photo I have chosen out of the bunch was one that I used my 70-200mm at 200mm and took 3 photos and stitched them together.

Why? Well a few reasons. One my wide lens was way to wide to even see the barn on the hill. My trusty 50mm was still too wide, unless I wanted to start hiking through a field of waste deep snow. So I decided on the big lens and borrowing a technique that I have seen my friend Kevin doing for a while. Below is the final result, hope you like it. I have some more on the way soon as I got out shooting today for a couple of hours. I almost got stuck with both legs into waist deep snow in a ditch as people drove by and just looked at me funny.

untitled-5.jpg