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DPChallenge Forums >> Individual Photograph Discussion >> Arches National Park
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11/06/2004 08:11:19 PM · #1
I finally got a few more of my photos finished from my winter trek to Arches National Park. I'd love some comments, especially on color, since my sweet wife isn't here to color-check me:

. . . .

. . . .



And here are a few you might have already seen:

. . . .



When you come out to Utah, let me know and I'll show you around!
11/06/2004 08:23:04 PM · #2
WOW, those are just incredible !
11/06/2004 08:57:35 PM · #3
What a beautiful place, and you captured the colors and textures so remarkably!!!!!

I adore them all, but I really love the most.

The colors look wonderful. The very first appears on my monitor to be a tad red, but that's probably my monitor and not you. Wonderful shots. I am in awe! :O)
11/06/2004 09:57:46 PM · #4
Originally posted by laurielblack:

...

The colors look wonderful. The very first appears on my monitor to be a tad red, but that's probably my monitor and not you. Wonderful shots. I am in awe! :O)


Would that red be due to the fact that the stone itself is very red at sunset, or does it look like it might be a Photoshop thing? Fiddling around with contrast changes colors, often enough that I can't detect anything wrong.
11/06/2004 10:04:29 PM · #5
I also think that it looks a little too much on the red side for that type of rock (even with sunset). Just going off all of the same I have seen in the canyons and there at Arches.
Great shots, no matter what!!!! I may have to swing up through (Muley Point I think), after my Dad's Memorial service on the 20th (in Gallup, NM). He wants his ashes spread at Muley Point near Mexican Hat, UT. So, I am going to get some shots form there.
11/06/2004 11:06:25 PM · #6
Kid's did a get job with the flashlight on the bush in balanced rock

Message edited by author 2004-11-06 23:07:22.
11/07/2004 12:31:04 AM · #7
Originally posted by dacrazyrn:

I also think that it looks a little too much on the red side for that type of rock (even with sunset). Just going off all of the same I have seen in the canyons and there at Arches.
Great shots, no matter what!!!! I may have to swing up through (Muley Point I think), after my Dad's Memorial service on the 20th (in Gallup, NM). He wants his ashes spread at Muley Point near Mexican Hat, UT. So, I am going to get some shots form there.


This sounds like an ambiguous trip. Sorry to hear of your father's death; I imagine this trip could be of the bittersweet variety?

Message edited by author 2004-11-07 00:31:20.
11/07/2004 12:49:25 AM · #8
holy crap those are some GERRRRATE SHOTS! EVERY TIME I SEE YOUR NEW WORK (oops sorry about the caps..) I add you to my fave fotog list only to realise you're already on it.

Are those natural colours or do you increase saturation b4 shooting.

Man, I wanna be just like you when I grow up!
great stuff! thanks for sharing!
11/07/2004 01:11:09 AM · #9
Originally posted by Rooster:

holy crap those are some GERRRRATE SHOTS! EVERY TIME I SEE YOUR NEW WORK (oops sorry about the caps..) I add you to my fave fotog list only to realise you're already on it.

Are those natural colours or do you increase saturation b4 shooting.

Man, I wanna be just like you when I grow up!
great stuff! thanks for sharing!


Hey Rooster, sorry. You can't be like me when you grow up. To do this you'd have to become male. Sorry.

As to your question of natural colours, I hope I've represented natural colours there!

With a shot like this one: it's easy to get natural colors because the sun is behind me and the sky is similar in tone to the rocks.

With a shot like this one, however: , it's a little trickier, because if I expose just for the cliff face, the sky will be totally blown out, and I happen to like the sky. So I underexposed that one. Of course, I had intended that one for b/w in the first place. In lightening the rocks, colors can get weird, so the comments about color are helpful. That's the most drastic one I had to deal with. The others should pretty much be okay. The one where I'm looking down on that knoll or butte was similar in that I had to underexpose so I could get some sky detail, but it wasn't as drastic as the other.

But generally, yes. These are colors of Utah's deserts. Cool, huh!
11/07/2004 03:49:58 AM · #10
Originally posted by dsidwell:

But generally, yes. These are colors of Utah's deserts. Cool, huh!


That is why I LOVE th place!!

And thanks David. It is bittersweet. But he is better off now without all that pain. Thanks again.

Message edited by author 2004-11-07 03:51:15.
11/07/2004 09:17:11 AM · #11
Originally posted by dsidwell:

I finally got a few more of my photos finished from my winter trek to Arches National Park. I'd love some comments, especially on color, since my sweet wife isn't here to color-check me:

. . . .

. . . .



And here are a few you might have already seen:

. . . .



When you come out to Utah, let me know and I'll show you around!


Great work. More reasons why Utah is on my "must shoot" destinations list.
11/07/2004 09:46:20 AM · #12
nice set of photos - colors are very nice.
the only thing i might suggest would be to lighten up on the sharpening a tad. the edges of the rocks seem a bit fake to me.

did you polarize with a camera filter - or do it somehow on the computer?

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