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“Angel Arch, Winter Colors” Antelope Canyon, Arizona

"Angel Arch, Winter Colors" Antelope Canyon, Arizona

LOWER ANTELOPE CANYON, ARIZONA

Most the images you see from Antelope Canyon are dramatic, sweeping images, the subjects being beams of light penetrating deep into the canyon floor.  Mine are no different, except for a few.  The first time I went into Lower Antelope Canyon was with a few friends, a couple being photographers.  It was late February, and we were fairly unaware that the beams of light were non-existent at that time of the year (try March through Sept for those).  We were, however, treated to a delightful mix of colors, which ranged from warm to cool as the light passed overhead and reflected into the narrow slot canyons.  This particular image was changed to black and white and used on a calendar called “Zen.”  I thought the color image also deserved a touch of recognition, as I thought it was very different from the other representations that I have of the Lower Antelope Canyon since then.  This image is not enhanced.  It represents the late February colors that are very interesting in these canyons.  The indirect light also gave the contours and patterns a very smooth transition that was apparent in the black and white rendering.

Camera: Canon 5D
LensCanon 24-70 mm lens at 40 mm
Settings: ISO100, f/11, 0.6 of a second
Filters:  UV filter
Other: Manfrotto Tripod. No postprocessing

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“Three Gossips and Courthouse Towers, Sunrise” Arches National Park, Utah

"Three Gossips and Courthouse Towers" Arches National Park, Utah by Joel Addams

ARCHES NATIONAL PARK, UTAH

Ahh.  It’s always good to be back home.  Home is where the deserts meet the mountains in Utah, and a mere four hours by car from Salt Lake City will land you squarely in Moab, Utah.   Only a stone’s throw from this mountain biking mecca are two National Parks, Canyonlands and Arches, both with accessible shooting opportunities.  This shot was from late winter with the receding snow in the park somewhat of an anomaly at times.  I’ve often been frustrated by the haze that settles in over Arches, but this sunrise was pretty reasonable.  A good old Singh-Ray external graduated neutral density filter does the trick of deepening the blue in the sky.  On to spring…

CameraCanon 5DMarkII,
Lens17-40 mm lens at 17 mm
Settings: ISO100, f/13, 1/6 of a second
Filters:  Singh-Ray 2-stop Graduated Neutral Density filterLB warming polarizer
Other: Manfrotto Carbon Fiber Tripod, Cable Release

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Young Monks, Kathmandu, Nepal

"Young Monks," Kopan Monastery in Kathmandu, Nepal by Joel Addams

KATHMANDU, NEPAL

There will be some new announcements concerning Nepal this week, so as a teaser, I thought I would focus on the Kopan Monastery in northwest side of Kathmandu.  I was with some local Sherpas, so they were able to ask if I could slip into one of the classes and take a few pictures.  I didn’t want to disturb their course, so I went in doing the army crawl on the knees.  It’s inevitable that kids are going to get distracted, and when one did, I was hoping to have my camera up and ready to fire.  The bokeh on this one helps out quite a bit, thanks to the Canon 50 mm f/1.2.

CameraCanon 5DMarkII
LensCanon 50 mm f/1.2
Settings: ISO160, f/1.2, 1/100th of a second
Filters:  B + W UV Filter
Other: Handheld

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“Trailrunner in Storm”

"Trailrunner in Storm" by Joel Addams. Athlete: Creighton Lowe

TRAILRUNNING, NORTHERN UTAH

Admittedly the set up for this shot was 100% pre-visualization.  I knew the spot and I was hoping that it was shallow enough to look realistic.  The day was actually really cold and a rain came and went.  Fortunately, my athlete, Creighton Lowe, goes on auto-drive in these shoots and does what you (and more likely what he) wants.  This is pretty helpful for any photographer, especially when the water is frigid and the air temperature is low.  He ran this about thirty times, and I photographed him handheld knowing that I would retouch the photograph afterwards.  I liked the water in this one the best and overlapped two images (the same image) in Photoshop and brought out the highlights in the runner, the water, and the trees.  If anyone is looking for a good male athlete for a shoot, hit him up.

CameraCanon 5DMarkII
LensCanon 24 mm f/3.5 Tilt-Shift Lens
Settings: ISO800, f/3.5, 1/60th of a second
Filters:  B + W UV filter
Other: Postprocessing, Lightroom adjustments on color temperature, curves.  Photoshop layering x 2.

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“Notre Dame and Seine” Paris, France

"Notre Dame and Seine" Paris, France by Joel Addams

NOTRE DAME, PARIS, FRANCE

Ah, Paris.  As the weather warms in the northern hemisphere, it’s hard not to think of traveling.  Almost anywhere.  Paris is always a favorite of mine, as I spent some time there years ago and have revisited the city on five or six occasions over 15 years.  The city, in fact, becomes more and more pleasurable the more you visit.  A few words in French can go a long way and full sentences in French are a gold mine.  I stood and photographed with a French man from Rouen in the Normandy on this particular evening, and we enjoyed the time together as he alerted me to a developing relationship that cropped up not 15 feet from our tripods.  We watched a man in his 60′s seem to strike up a conversation with a girl who appeared to be in her 20′s.  My new friend smiled at me and say in French, “Wanna bet that they go off together?”  I took him up on that bet, thinking surely my friend was nuts.  Thirty minutes later they left arm in arm, back across the Seine where the man had come originally.

Ah Paris.

CameraCanon 5DMarkII
Lens: 70-200 mm IS f/2.8 lens at 200 mm
Settings: ISO100, f/8, 3.2 seconds
Other: Gitzo Basalt Tripod, Cable Release

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Tips on Framing Photographs

Number 60 of 235 prints of "Manarola at Dusk" at 26x40" print. Taken with iPhone.

TIPS ON FRAMING PHOTOGRAPHS

This is a brief post on a few points about what to do when your beautiful photographic prints arrive in the mail or you pick them up from the printer.  Assuming you are not a framing expert, what do you do?  I would first call around and get an idea about what framers are charging to mount, mat, and frame a specific size of photographic print.  Say you have a 16 x 24″ print.  You may decide to call five retailers and ask about what the charges are for mounting the photograph, matting it (perhaps in simple white 4-ply mat), using regular glass, and using the cheapest, most simple black frame available (usually some plastic derivative material).  At least this way, you can know whether the framer is going to charge $100 or $500 for somewhat similar products.  And yes, the prices can swing this much.  In the end, see if there is a wholesale framing shop in your city, as this company will usually give you a much better price.  The catch here is that you often need a business license and will need to show that license the first time you frame with that company.  As with anything, you get what you pay for.  Usually.  Michael’s 50% off is usually still higher than the wholesale framing prices, so watch out when it comes to the retailers.  On the other hand, some of the retailers really know how to make a piece look good, and you may be on your own for design when it comes to the wholesale framer.  In addition, here is a bullet list of some other simple things to keep in mind:

1)    Always lift the print from one corner or opposite corners in order not to bend or crease the image.  Papers are becoming more durable, but one crease can really ruin the image for you and your client.

2)    Have a professional framer who is comfortable mounting a 20 x 30” print do the job.  This is important as the wrong technique may end up damaging the print or decreasing its life.  My first printer killed $750 worth of prints as that person didn’t really know how to mount correctly a large panorama print.  They peeled off in months, and I was left trying to explain this to a client who called me and who was very frustrated.  You live and you learn.

3)    Avoid highly anti-reflective glasses.  These are not just more expensive; they cut the light that is reflected from the supergloss print and decrease its brilliance and luster.  The image was shown under a slightly reflective glass “regular” glass to preserve the print’s luminosity.  Framers will often want to upsell very expensive anti-reflective glass, but often I have found that this is not helpful to the print.  I semi-reflective (single-coated) glass is probably best for most color prints.  Black and white prints can handle much more anti-reflection.  One of my colorful prints hung in California was suddenly a very muted “matte” finish after a framer upsold my client to a severely anti-reflective glass which cost him several hundred dollars more!

4)    Keep the print and framed print out of direct sunlight and keep it in cool to room temperature rooms, around 68 to 70 degrees F.  This will ensure its long life.  My melted prints in a restaurant which closed at 2 p.m. and then literally baked during the summer afternoon was a manifestation that prints cannot handle severe heat!  That was the first place I hung prints over ten years ago…no more restaurants.

5)    Find someone you trust to do all this and use them over and over again!

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“Found Photography” Photobooth, Paris, France

Photobooth portrait, Paris, France. Circa 1996.

PARIS, FRANCE

This is not my idea.  In fact, it’s not really the idea of Amelie.  I know, I know.  That’s sacrilege to say, but one of my friends in Paris in 1996 started collecting leftover portraits from photobooths as a hobby.  In fact, it was a little trend that caught on.  I had a pretty good collection going at one point, but I can only find one now.  This gentleman, along with hundreds of others, probably just got frustrated with waiting or didn’t understand that he had to wait a full three minutes. Whatever the reason, there is something a bit artistic about the double diptych, not one representation but an identical four.  In addition, the black and white prints that come out of the old machines have a texture and feel that is fantastic. Too bad I can’t call myself the photographer, just the collector of interesting photographs on this one.

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“Snake Charming” Marrakesh, Morocco

"Snake Charmer" Marrekesh, Morocco by Joel Addams

MARRAKESH, MOROCCO

This was one of those situations where you know you had to make the picture happen or it just wasn’t.  Gentlemen who play with snakes in the popular marketplace of Marrakesh have one thing on their minds:  making a little cash.  You have to decide as a photographer if that is worth it for you.  If you’re shooting for an editorial publication, then no money or services or goods can be exchanged for taking these pictures.  I wasn’t.  I thought at best this would be a decent stock image, so I gave the guy a small amount of cash so I could position myself on my stomach for a few minutes and use a long lens to capture the cobra.  My plan was to keep the face of the gentleman out of the picture completely so I could freely use the image how I wanted.  In addition, I was trying to keep the snake in the dark parts of his clothing, so as to contrast the snake with the background.

Camera: Canon 5D
Lens: Canon 70-200 mm IS lens
Settings: ISO100, f/3.2, 1/250th of a second
Filters:  Circular Polarizer
Other: Handheld

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“Telephone Booth in the Forest”

"Telephone Booth in the Forest" by Joel Addams

YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK, CALIFORNIA

It was hard to pass up this illuminated telephone booth in the middle of the forest a little while back.  Admittedly, you always think a bear is creeping up on you when you are standing outside in the black night of the forest photographing a telephone booth.  Alas, no bear.  But it was cold.  Why this Pacific Bell telephone booth is still standing and illuminated is beyond me.  I think I photographed it because of its message…absurdity or loneliness or whatever.  And I like naturally dark edges on my images.  All of these combined to make this image interesting to me.  Enough to risk the bears and the cold for awhile.

CameraCanon 5DMarkII
LensCanon 50 mm f/1.2
Settings: ISO2000, f/1.2, 1/25th of a second
Filters:  B + W UV Filter
Other: Handheld

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8×12″ Sale on Prints

"Out of Darkness" Antelope Canyon, Arizona by Joel Addams

ONE-DAY SALE ON 8 x 12″ PRINTS, MARCH 27, 2012

From a variety of prints from the “California” Portfolio to favorites from Europe and the West of the United States, enjoy a 30% discount on all prints at 8″ x 12″ on Supergloss for color prints and on a silver rag paper for black and white.  Select the sale price under “Prints” and under the specific image on the website.

 

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