MISSISSIPPI RIVER STORIES 2023 #1 - GREETING A NEW YEAR


Mississippi River, looking north from John Deere Dike, Dubuque, Iowa

Welcome in 2023! I think there is no better way to start into a new year than going for a walk with a camera in hand. With the grandkids in tow we made a short, but enjoyable hike to the end of John Deere Dike. This leads you about half a mile into the main channel of the mighty Mississippi River. Despite the warm weather we had after Christmas, the ice is still standing for the most part on the river and it had a dark color during this early evening hour. Large patches of fog had developed in the distance and the setting sun illuminated the clouds above.

This light and marker for the boat traffic has been my anchor point for many images before. I can tell you, the mood in these photos is never twice the same. Today it was quiet, calm, and kinda romantic. Not much effort was required in post process to emphasize what I saw in my mind for the final picture and for another, new Mississippi River story.

BEAVER MOON


November’s full Beaver Moon coincided last night with a full lunar eclipse. I didn’t set the alarm for this event but woke up early enough to see it briefly between the trees this morning. The photo was made earlier, shortly after moonrise, from the balcony on the east side of the house. Nothing, but a romantic look through the trees here on the bluffs above the valley…

Nikon Z6II, Nikkor Z 24-70, f/4 S, Induro GIT 404XL tripod, RRS BH-55 ball head,   @ 67mm, 0.6 s, f/8, ISO 2500

AUTUMN IN MINNESOTA #11


Bear Head Lake, Minnesota

I admit, this photo was made with some quick instructions shouted across the water. I told Joan to paddle very slowly in front of the tamarack tree, that was for a brief moment perfectly illuminated by the sun. It could have been a great fall shot with its color contrast between the beautiful tamarack and the blue kayak, and as the ice on the cake a nice reflection on the water, if… Yes, if there wasn’t the dead trees in the picture. To be honest I didn’t even see them until I was back home and viewed the pictures on screen. Sure, I can invest another hour and remove all the dead wood from the photo. Photoshop and other software gives us endless possibilities to tinker with an image. But is it worth the time? I clean up a landscape picture if necessary, especially around the edges (called “border police” by other photographers), but I rather go out and shoot again instead of removing a bigger flaw in post process. Every photographer has to make their own decisions about how much time to spend for fixing a problem. Unless I try a new technique in post process I hardly ever exceed ten minutes for working with a RAW file and bring out the romance in the photo. Life is too short and the world doesn’t come to an end if a photo doesn’t get published…

ROMANCING AN UNROMANTIC LOCATION


Heritage Pond, Dubuque, Iowa

This shot with soft light and reflections on the water suggest a quiet, romantic location, just a few minutes before sunset, right? But nothing of the above was true. Behind the belt of reeds is a busy highway where people headed home from work or shopping. The noise level was not bad but definitely not quiet and the sunset was still 45 minutes away.

The steep bluffs of the Mississippi Valley make the sun disappear a little earlier, hence the blue reflections from the sky on the water. The light is nevertheless very warm and by watching the white balance settings in camera and underexpose by one f-stop we can romance the photo to the final result. Shooting from across the pond and keeping any distracting element from the highway out of the frame was possible by using the Nikon Nikkor 70-200, f/4 at 200 mm. No magic, just using what the camera has to offer…

LESS IS MORE


Lake Michigan, Door Peninsula, Wisconsin ------

Today’s cameras have a lot of dynamic range, about 2-3 stops of light more than the good old film cameras. This is for some people still not enough and they employ HDR  (high dynamic range) software to get even more than just a black dot out of a mouse hole in the ground (Am I too sarcastic? 😉). There is actually nothing wrong with that, it just may not benefit every kind of photo, it's overdone quite often. For me there is usual enough information stored in the RAW files that may become eventually a photo, printed or published here on the website. Romancing a landscape image does not require to see every tiny branch or making the inside of a crack in a rock visible. Less is more. Sure, in a high contrast environment the shadows can be lifted and quite often the highlights are lowered a little bit. For this photo it was all about balancing the contrast a tad to make the lines (sun spots, waves, clouds) generate some magic.

‘ROMANCING’ A RAILROAD BRIDGE


Mississippi River, Swivel-Railroad bridge, Dubuque, Iowa -----

Some of my favorite subjects for architecture photography are the bridges across the Mississippi River. Unless it is a totally new subject that I haven’t shot before, there has to be a certain quality of light before I consider to take the camera out of the bag. This happened one evening earlier this month at the swivel railroad bridge in Dubuque. I had never made any close photos at the north side of the bridge and discovered just recently the access for this shooting location.

By the way, these bridges are a great subject to become familiar with new gear, like cameras, lenses, or teleconverters. Learning about depth of field, light fall off, sharpness, etc. in a controlled environment, but still with an interesting subject in front of the lens, is priceless (beats test shots in the backyard by far 😊).

This photo is another try to ‘romance’ my landscape photos with Macphun’s Luminar software. I still have a tear in my eye because the good old NIK collection is on it’s way out, but any time I gain more experience with Luminar I love it a little more. It is intuitiv for someone who has worked with Adobe Lightroom and NIK before, but I can see why it might be a little overwhelming in the beginning for someone who is new in post processing their images. There are a lot decisions that can be made how to process an image and I will be the first one to admit, overdoing it is very easy…

LATE SUMMER, BUT NOT FALL YET


Nikon D750, Sigma 150mm / f2.8 APO EX DG HSM

I flew back from Texas today, drove home from the airport, unpacked the suitcase, grabbed the camera gear and the dog, and went out the door again… Couldn’t wait to go on a wildlife mission after a week of being away. Ok, I will talk about the wildlife in another post but like to show you a photo instead I made while returning to the car, just a few minutes before the sun disappeared behind the ridge. I looked over my shoulder and across the pond and saw the potential for a shot. Although we don’t have any fall colors yet, it doesn’t mean you can’t “romance” the landscape. I switched the white balance from ‘Auto’ to ‘cloudy’ and exposed for the highlights on the tree trunks. This keeps the colors warm and strong and the darker shadows provide the contrast for the subject in this image. Some tree branches are already bare but many leaves are still green, and so are the reeds in the pond. A photo you can only make in late, late summer...