Thanks Ed, I’m always happy to get your comments. This picture is one of my favorites of this series because it conveys some of that sense of adventure I find in places like this.
The treatment is also a tribute, of sorts, to the earliest photographers working in the American west (specifically, John Karl Hillers who took some of the first images of what is now Zion National Park around 1870). Here’s a link to his bio (and a quick search will bring you to some of his landscapes): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Karl_Hillers
Wow! My kinda canyon; very inviting.
I’m sure you’d love it there, Harrie. Lots of possibilites.
This image and Sandstone Skyline are magnificent and I feel words donβt do justice to articulate the beauty they exude. So, shut up and look may be appropriate here. TouchΓ©!
Thanks Ed, I’m always happy to get your comments. This picture is one of my favorites of this series because it conveys some of that sense of adventure I find in places like this.
The treatment is also a tribute, of sorts, to the earliest photographers working in the American west (specifically, John Karl Hillers who took some of the first images of what is now Zion National Park around 1870). Here’s a link to his bio (and a quick search will bring you to some of his landscapes): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Karl_Hillers
Thanks John. Liked the Hiller bio but you are in a class of your own.
thanks π
Le tue foto parlano di noi ma senza la voce umana: un bene moltiplicato.πππ
Grazie tanto, davvero. ππ Ciao
π