Sean Bagshaw Outdoor Exposure Photography

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Sean speaks at IrishLight Landscape Photography Festival in Dublin, Ireland

April 4, 2019 by Sean Bagshaw

Registration and more information

“IRISHLIGHT is a landscape photography festival with a range of events that we hope will help to inspire and educate the landscape community in Ireland and abroad.

The festival is run by Peter Gordon and Jelena Derk as a forum to pull the best professional Irish based landscape photographers together, bring international photographers to Ireland while also mobilizing the amazing enthusiast talent that exists both here and abroad.”

Presenters this year include Marc Adamus, Joel Tjintjelaar and Paul Sanders.

Sean will be speaking on October 6th at The Royal Marine Hotel in  Dun Laoghaire, Dublin, Ireland.

 

Tagged With: digital photography, digital workflow, fine art photography, landscape photography, light, nature photography, outdoor photography, photography technique, sean bagshaw photography

Sean to Present at The 2019 New England Camera Club Council Annual Photography Conference in Amherst, Massachusetts

March 6, 2019 by Jennifer Bagshaw

Learn it, Shoot it, Edit it! Sean will be a presenter at this year’s New England Camer Club Council annual conference in Amherst, Massachusetts, July 12, 12 and 14. In addition to numerous great presentations and workshops, the conference features image reviews and critiques, photo walks and lots of hands-on opportunities. Join Sean and other professionals in the classroom and the field in Amherst, Massachusetts this summer!

Tagged With: digital photography, digital photography workshop, fine art photography, landscape photography, lightroom, techniques, tk panel, workflow

"Frost Light" – Yosemite Falls, Yosemite National Park

March 10, 2017 by Sean Bagshaw Leave a Comment

"Frost Light" – Yosemite Falls, Yosemite National Park

Frost-Light
Yosemite Falls resplendent in frost and glancing morning sun with the valley still shrouded in shadow. I took this while out on road trip with my good buds, David Cobb and Zack Schnepf last week. We shacked up in the Falcon for seven days. More bad jokes, laughing and flatulence than most people could handle.

Canon 5D MK4, 47mm, polarizer, 1/20 second, f/11, ISO 100.

Filed Under: Photography Journal Tagged With: landscape photography, outdoor photography, travel photography

Ghost Forest – Torres del Paine National Park, Patagonia, Chile

February 8, 2017 by Sean Bagshaw Leave a Comment

Ghost Forest – Torres del Paine National Park, Patagonia, Chile

Ghost-Forest

Fires have burned large sections of Torres del Paine NP in the last 20 years, many of them apparently set off accidentally by backpackers. I never like to see beautiful landscapes burn, but fire is part of the ecological process and these burned out trees do create impact and help tell this particular visual story.

Canon 5DsR, 25mm, Polarizer. 1/10 second @ f/18, ISO 100.

Filed Under: Featured Photo, Photography Journal, Photography Travel Journal Tagged With: landscape photography, travel photography

Grants Pass Presentation: Photographing and Developing for High Dynamic Range

January 13, 2015 by Sean Bagshaw Leave a Comment

Grants Pass Presentation: Photographing and Developing for High Dynamic Range

Grants Pass Camera Club Third Wednesday Meeting

First Christian Church Fellowship Hall
305 SW H St Grants Pass, OR

Wednesday, January 21, 2015 7 – 9 pm

Presentation: Photographing and Developing For High Dynamic Range free and open to the public

Club website and contact

Bracketed-Series1

A common occurrence when photographing the landscape is that our images don’t match what we saw. The brighter areas in an image may be completely overexposed or shadow areas may appear totally black. This is because the dynamic range, or contrast, we encounter in nature is often at the edge of or beyond what our cameras can record in a single exposure. Fortunately, there are many ways to overcome challenges of high dynamic range light, both in the camera and in developing. Sean’s presentation will look at different types of natural light, how to evaluate the dynamic range in a scene and several techniques for controlling the dynamic range in your images.

Filed Under: Past Events Tagged With: digital workflow, Exposure Blending, landscape photography, Photography Presentation, Photoshop techniques

My Favorite Photographs From 2014

December 29, 2014 by Sean Bagshaw 46 Comments

My Favorite Photographs From 2014

As 2014 draws down to it’s final day, I’m reminded that it is time to write this once yearly article and share my favorite images from the last 12 months. All credit actually must go to Jim Goldstein, who for the past eight years has curated his now famous and highly anticipated Best Photos project. Every year Jim invites photographers from around the world to look back at their year, reflect on their images and agonizingly select just a few that feel significant. Over 300 photographers contributed last year alone. The 2014 edition will come out the week after New Years and the previous seven editions of The Best Of articles are always available on Jim’s blog.

It is a great tradition on many levels. Looking back at one’s work over an entire year is a valuable exercise for a photographer. It is a challenge to look through hundreds, or thousands, of images and decide which ones call out for a closer look, remind us of memorable moments, mark milestones or communicate something that will impact others. Being included in Jim’s list is also a fun way to participate in the photographic community, contribute to the growing interest in photography as an art form and connect with other like minded people who share a passion for outdoor photography. Furthermore, I look forward to spending a good evening, or three, exploring the photography of others who contribute their year’s best. Every year I am introduced to compelling imagery by people I wouldn’t otherwise know about and I learn from and get inspired by the creativity and adventurous spirit of others.

Without further rambling, I present my favorite photographs (and some short narration to go with them) from 2014. I hope you enjoy and I wish you many life affirming adventures in 2015! Please share which ones you like best, or anything else for that matter, in the comments below. (You can click on images if you would like to view them larger)

 

Kaloko-Honokohau National Historic Park, Big Island of Hawaii

Inlet

I enjoy the warm, saturated light, the symmetry of the rocks and the dynamic water motion in this scene I found just hours after arriving on the Big Island of Hawaii in February.

Hala Trees, Waipio Valley, Big Island of Hawaii

Hala Trees

I was fascinated by the Seussian character of this forest in the Waipio Valley on Hawaii. Intrigued by the shapes, tones and subtle light, I chose to showcase these features and go without color.

Lands End

Land’s End

The rugged coastline of Southern Oregon is some of the most dramatic on the planet as far as I’m concerned. One evening in March, after many previous visits to this spot, David Cobb and I were treated to a sunset that helped convey its beauty in a photograph. I particularly like the tree on the headland in the distance.

Eclipse Over Mt. Shasta Revisited, Shasta Valley, California

Lunar Eclipse Revisited

In 2007 I first photographed a lunar eclipse over Mt. Shasta. Since then my technique and equipment have improved but I had been waiting for a chance to revisit the theme. My opportunity finally came in April, with a total lunar eclipse on a cloudless night.

Now Comes Spring

Now Comes Spring

Lupine may be my favorite flower on the earth so this meadow took my breath away. When I saw the sun sinking through a layer of thin clouds I knew the conditions for photographing the lupine with back light would be optimal. Their slender height makes them very challenging to photograph since the slightest breeze sets them swaying.

06-The_Gift_Tree

The Gift Tree

My favorite rhododendron in my favorite redwood grove. Myself and others have photographed it many times, but one evening in May all the elements for magic came together: flowers, light fog and soft, warm light from the setting sun.

Storybook Land, Lake Bled, Slovenia

Storybook Land

Slovenia is perhaps the most picturesque small country I have visited, with craggy Alps, lakes, medieval villages, castles, church spires, waterfalls, canyons and enchanted forests. My childhood storybook vision played out in front of my camera one morning at Lake Bled.

08-Piran

Piran

Piran is a classic walled village on Slovenia’s coast. At night, light, shadow, color, setting and mood all play together. Through my camera I was transported to a past time.

09-Autumn_Thunder

Autumn Thunder

Zack Schnepf and I were constantly on the job in Colorado during the fall this year. Out of all the memorable scenes we photographed on that trip, this sunset storm light in the Gothic Valley near Crested Butte stands out.

10-Reunion

Reunion

Aspen trees, in addition to having brilliant fall color, have a cartoonish, human quality. To me this grove looked like a group of old friends getting together.

11-True_Grit

True Grit

Another spectacular light show in the mountains of Colorado. The quality of light combined with the dramatic peaks, dusting of snow and yellow aspen made this one of the best outdoor visual experiences I had all year.

Filed Under: Featured Photos, Photography Journal Tagged With: Favorite Photographs, landscape photography, outdoor photography

My Favorite Images of 2013

December 30, 2013 by Sean Bagshaw 34 Comments

My Favorite Images of 2013

Another wonderful year of traveling, exploring, searching, watching, waiting. These are the photographs I took in 2013 which are my favorites. Which is your favorite? (Each image can be viewed larger by clicking on it.)

Lonely Coast. Late twilight on cliffs edge somewhere on the southern Oregon coast.
March. Lonely Coast. Late twilight on a cliff edge somewhere along the southern Oregon coast.

Fortuna-Falls
March. La Fortuna Falls, Costa Rica.

The-Mighty-and-The-Meek
April. The Mighty and The Meek. Trillium growing in the shadow of a towering redwood.

Tattered-and-Swift
May. Tattered and Swift. Thunderstorms looming over Steens Mountain.

Shadows-Call
May. Shadows Call. Spring lupine beneath the stars in the Shasta Valley.

Gates-of-the-Imnaha
June. Gates of The Imnaha. Fleeting spring green in the Imnaha River Canyon.

Reflection-Lake
August. Reflection Lake. A classic sunrise view and reflection of Mt. Rainier.

Two-Guardians-of-Cape-Arago
September. Two Guardians of Cape Arago. Intricate sandstone formations on the Oregon coast illuminated by a fantastic sunrise event.

Panther-Creek-Falls
October. Panther Creek Falls. One of the most delicate and beautiful waterfalls in the Northwest.

Stillness-and-Light
October. Stillness and Light. Compelling geometry, light and color at one of Oregon's most loved landscape scenes.

Golden
November. Golden. A country road disappears into the colors, light and mists of fall in the Rogue Valley.

Early-Winter
December. Early Winters. Alpenglow light at dawn in the central Oregon Cascade Range.

Sharpened-version
December. Ice and Fire. Delicate ice and reflected sunrise light on the Crooked River after an early winter cold snap.

December 31. The final hours of 2103 spent on the Oregon coast.
December 31. End Of A Year. The final hours of 2103 spent on the Oregon coast.

Filed Under: Featured Photos, Photography Journal Tagged With: Favorite Photographs, landscape photography, nature photography, outdoor photography

Chasing Light – A Presentation at The Ashland Outdoor Store

November 13, 2013 by Sean Bagshaw Leave a Comment

Chasing Light – A Presentation at The Ashland Outdoor Store

Join me on Thursday, November 21 at the Ashland Outdoor Store for an evening of images and stories. I will be sharing the vision and spirit of exploration that guides my search for rare light and dramatic landscapes as well as a glimpse into the techniques I use to create my photographs. The presentation begins at 7:00 PM and is free and open to the public. The Ashland Outdoor Store is located at 37 Third Street, Ashland, Oregon.
Chasing Light [1.0]

Filed Under: Past Events Tagged With: landscape photography, light, nature photography, Photography Presentation

Anatomy Of A Sunrise

August 31, 2011 by Sean Bagshaw 8 Comments

Anatomy Of A Sunrise

Have you seen the time lapse twilight and night photography of Terje Sorgjerd? In his film, The Arctic Light, he shares a gorgeous high speed chronology of extended magical twilight hours he finds in the far reaches of Norway. In the spring sunsets and sunrises at this latitude can last for many hours.

Not counting people who live in such extreme latitudes as northern Norway, I don’t think we get frequent chances to carefully study a magnificent twilight sky show these days. Many of us aren’t awake and outside early enough in the morning to witness the sunrise. Much of our day in these modern times is spent indoors or within an urban landscape which significantly reduces how much time we spend viewing the sky. I have often noticed a faint warm glow coming through my east facing living room windows only to find I was missing a brilliant sunset in the sky to the west. Additionally, opportunities to linger in the twilight are commonly sacrificed to the pace of life, rushing from office to car with heads down or eating dinner while reading an iPad, sorting through junk mail and sending texts. Many of us can only remember a handful of times when chance and circumstance have enabled us to be in the right place at the right time to look up at the sky and be amazed.

As an outdoor photographer I have learned to revel in the light at the edges of day. I devote many mornings and evenings to searching for the conditions that will allow me to have an exhilarating sunrise or sunset experience just one more time. The process of photographing at the edges of day motivates me to watch with great interest and concentration. Some sky shows last for mere seconds, while others will linger for many minutes, colors changing and moving around the sky. I can only imagine witnessing a twilight that lasts for many hours, such as the ones Terje records in Norway.

Recently I came across a series of photographs I took during a spectacular sunrise in North Cascades National Park in Washington in the fall of 2010. It was one of those rare occasions in which the event played out over many minutes, allowing me to photograph it several times from slightly different vantage points. While I worked on each image individually I didn’t notice how, as a series, they illustrate the anatomy and progression of light, color and pattern in a way that is hard to share any other way.

This is how that morning unfolded. Chip Phillips, David Cobb and I had camped in a dense wood below Cascade Pass near Sahalie and Pelton peaks and the stunning Sahalie Arm trail. The night before we had been dismayed at the sight of a fallen climber’s body being lifted out of the mountains on the end of a rope beneath a rescue helicopter. It was still replaying in my dreams when Chip rose at 3:00 AM with the intent of hiking high above the pass before sunrise. David left camp second, about an hour later. I was last out of camp and wasn’t far up the trail when the sunrise light began to show itself.

Cursing myself for sleeping too long, I made this photograph along the trail still low in the valley in near darkness. The first light was just beginning to illuminate the clouds and the dark features of the land. A long 15 second exposure at f/13 and ISO 640 recorded the dim landscape much brighter than it appeared to the eye. A second exposure of just 4 seconds captured a good exposure for the sky and the properly exposed areas of each were blended together using layer masking techniques.

Aware that the best light would come rapidly and that I wasn’t in the ideal location, I ran up the trail, stumbling in the dark and breathing hard. The color intensified and I frantically searched for something to anchor the foreground of my next photo. I found a small mountain ash tree turning red with the coming autumn. At the same time I noticed the stream in the valley beginning to reflect the red-orange of the warming sky. Radiant light reflecting off the undulating under surface of the clouds back lit the foliage making it appear to be glowing from within. This wide angle, vertical composition turned out to be my favorite from that morning. I titled it Unforgettable Fire and it is now part of my print collection.

Satisfied that I had managed to take a good photo despite my late start I relaxed a bit. However, to my surprise, the color showed no signs of abating. I continued up the trail looking for other perspectives from which to photograph the scene. I scrambled around, struggling to find a composition as compelling as the last. While I didn’t find another that felt as good, I kept stopping to shoot because the color in the sky continued to spread and intensify, accentuating the shapes in the clouds. In this image the brilliant reds and oranges overpower the rest of the scene.

Further along my ascent of the pass the colors began to shift from deep reds to lighter oranges and yellows and cool light began to filter through the cloud layer from above.

Finally, as the day brightened, the sun rose above the cloud layer. The under-lighting faded along with the color, leaving the clouds flat and gray from below but giving a glimpse of blue sky and higher clouds above.

That morning, as well as many others, have become important and indelible parts of my consciousness. Through photography I have become better at being acutely present and attentive during such magical twilight events, making them that much richer, meaningful and memorable. Having the photographs as keepsakes gives me the opportunity to relive the experience and see it again in ways I wasn’t able to as I witnessed it.

Filed Under: Featured Photos, Photography Journal Tagged With: landscape photography, National Park Photography, photography technique, Twilight Photography

Trip Report: Photographing Oregon's Owyhee Country

May 17, 2011 by Sean Bagshaw 6 Comments

Trip Report: Photographing Oregon's Owyhee Country

Malheur County may be one of the least known and least visited parts of Oregon. It is located in the extreme southeast corner of the state bordering Idaho and Nevada. Geographically it is one of the largest counties in Oregon with a total area of about 10,000 square miles, but it has one of the lowest population densities at just 3 people per square mile. Most of the population is centered around Ontario and Vale in the northern 15% of the county. Almost everything to the south is open range land managed by the BLM. There is just one paved road, Hwy 95, and one town, Jordan Valley.

But out in the arid scrub and ranch land of Malheur County lies the Owyhee River. The Owyhee drains a remote area of the high desert plateau on the northern boundary of the Great Basin and flows northward to the Snake River. The various arms and tributaries of the Oywhee cut deep canyons through the Owyhee Plateau, many with vertical rock walls that in places can be over 1,000 feet deep. 120 miles of the Owyhee River Canyon were designated as Wild and Scenic in 1984.

The southern reaches of the river can only be accessed by dirt roads, some fairly well maintained and others not more than jeep tracks. Even then there are just a handful of spots where it is possible to reach the river by vehicle. Most of the Owyhee and it’s tributaries can only be explored by backpacking or rafting.


People have been suggesting I check out the Owyhee country for years. As it is not along any usual route of travel and many hours from just about anywhere I had never visited this part of the state until this spring. I went to do some exploring and take some photos with fellow photographer, David Cobb, who had previously hiked and photographed portions of the river.

Finishing the morning shoot at the Cliffs of Rome.

I was absolutely drawn in by the beauty and scope of the canyons and the surrounding high desert. Along the drive south from Ontario the dirt road first takes you through Succor Creek Canyon which is just a small preview of what’s to come, but very scenic in its own right.

Succor Creek Canyon

Leslie Gulch is the main attraction along the Lake Owyhee reservoir and provides the easiest access to the river in this area. Throughout the gulch and all along Lake Owyhee the rock spires and escarpments are very reminiscent of Smith Rock State Park only, as David says, “on steroids”. We explored the main Leslie Gulch road and made a couple of forays up side canyons. The area to the north known as the Honeycombs looks particularly enticing but can only be reached by backpacking in or taking a boat over from the west side of the lake.

North of the town of Jordan Valley you can follow the Jordan Craters Road for about 30 miles into a large lava flow that originates at the Coffee Pot Crater.

Coffee Pot Crater

Spatter Cone at Jordan Craters

View from inside a spatter cone

Continuing on a side road from there you can wind your way down steep switchbacks and reach the river at the historic Birch Creek Ranch. This is one of the main takeouts for rafters floating the river.

Cliffs at Birch Creek Ranch

Birch Creek Ranch

Southwest of Jordan Valley is the community of Rome. Near Rome there are several dirt roads that offer access to the river canyon as well as the nearby Cliffs of Rome and Chalk Basin further to the north.

Pillars Of Rome

South of Hwy 95 between Rome and Jordan Valley, Three Forks road makes it’s way across about 30 miles of high desert to join the Owyhee River at Three Forks. David and I were glad to have my 4×4 for this road as we found it heavily rutted after winter rains. We also had to make about three creek crossings, the deepest of which engulfed my front bumper. From the map we saw that we could stop along the road a few miles north of Three Forks and hike out the the canyon rim. Photographing a roadless portion of the wild and scenic Owyhee at sunset sounded appealing, but after a few steps off the road we discovered ticks clinging to our pants. Despite giving David a serious case of the willies we continued on and were able to access a sweeping vista of the canyon before sundown. By the time we completed our hike back in the fading light we had found over 100 ticks between us! A strip search in the headlights revealed several more. I managed to find all of the ones on me, but David found several more lurking on him during the night and didn’t get a wink of sleep.

David trying to ignore the ticks

Three Forks is a popular put-in for rafters and the presence of hot springs make it an attraction for others as well. My main interest in returning to Three Forks is that this is where the adventurous backpacker can access the branching web of the upper Owyhee Canyon and it’s various tributaries. Radiating out from the Three Forks area are no less than six deep and narrow canyons including the Big Antelope, Louse and Middle Fork.

While I was able to take some exciting photographs on this scouting trip I am excited to get back soon. Future trips will include spending several days rafting and photographing the Owyhee proper as well as doing some back country packing up the tributary canyons south of Three Forks.

Filed Under: Photography Journal, Photography Travel Journal Tagged With: landscape photography, Oregon Photography, outdoor photography, southern oregon photography, travel photography

On Landscape Photography, Digital Image Developing and Artistic Expression

February 28, 2011 by Sean Bagshaw 4 Comments

On Landscape Photography, Digital Image Developing and Artistic Expression

One of the mindsets that guides my photography is that the human eye and the camera don’t experience the world in the same way. Photographs are more limited than human sight in many ways, but can also see in ways that we can not. It is my goal to understand what the camera sees so I can manipulate and coax it to capture a photograph that reconciles with my own view of the landscape. To some this goes against tradition. We have been conditioned to believe that a photograph portrays, or at least should portray, an accurate record of the world and we must accept what the camera gives us. In truth, the very act of taking a photograph significantly alters a scene from how we perceive it in any number of ways. I’m less interested in the literal and more interested in what I can communicate and create. Artists have always endeavored to express themselves, their experiences and their impressions through their medium. A camera is a tool to do just that, to paint an artistic vision of the world. I want to capture something that excites me and hopefully resonates with others. In a recent interview my friend, professional musician and fellow photographer, Chip Phillips said, “The main thing to make the [musical] performance successful is to stir up an emotional response in the listener, and the same is true with a photograph.”

Both the way that we capture and develop our images have entered a new and exciting phase. Early on I embraced the changes digital technology brought to the art form. The digital age has allowed photographers to overcome many shortcomings and limitations of cameras that have frustrated them from the beginning. The new tools of photography enable me to be more creative and to express my experiences and vision more fully than ever before. I will always be fan and a student of traditional landscape and nature photography, venturing into the land to work with the raw materials of light, form, color and texture. And while the photographic tools and techniques are evolving, the motivation and the thought processes of the nature photographer remain unchanged. If anything, I find that it is more important than ever to be on top of my game. It takes skill in traditional photography techniques as well as skill in digital developing to get my images to approach what I hope for them.

There are those who worry that digital photography has lowered the bar. I can say my experience has been just the opposite. All the principles of light and composition continue to apply and proper camera technique is still essential. In fact, the way that I work with the camera in the field these days is more involved and creative than it ever could have been with film. I shoot thinking several steps ahead to how I will want to develop the image later on. In just a few seconds I might capture a range of frames utilizing different exposures, apertures and focal points in order to collect all the visual information in the scene I’ll need to develop the finished piece. Learning how to think and work with so many variables while simultaneously pre-visualizing the future processing has been far more interesting and challenging than working within the confines of a single frame of film ever was. Far from being a shortcut or a creativity killer, digital photography allows us to express a new and exciting vision, not unlike the way film photography did when it was introduced over a century ago.

For further musings on the topics of photography, artistic expression and where current digital developing techniques come to bare I would point you toward Guy Tal’s recent article: Lie Like You Mean It.

There are so many great activities one can be involved in in life. For many of us, one of those activities is the magic of exploring the world with our cameras in hand, capturing moments and trying to make lasting memories of the scenes that impress upon us.

Links that might be of interest:

Upcoming image processing classes and outdoor photography workshops.

Instructional videos on fine art image processing.

In my photography I am aware that the human eye and the camera don’t see the world in the same way. Photographs are more limited than human sight in some ways, but can also see in other ways that we can not. Since its invention we have been conditioned to accept that photography portrays a “literal” record of the world. However, as an artist, I’m less interested in the literal and more interested in how I can communicate my own experience and personal artistic vision. Artists have always endeavored to express themselves, their experiences and their impressions through their medium. My challenge is to use the camera to do just that, to paint an artistic vision of the world as I see it. I strive to do it well enough that it resonates with others.

I am a fan of traditional landscape and nature photography. I derive great pleasure from venturing into the land and working with the raw materials of natural light, form, color and texture. The earth is my palette. But I also want to go beyond photography as a mere technical pursuit or objective record of natural history. In my photos I struggle to express something beyond a literal representation of the scene. Through the use of traditional photography techniques as well as careful digital developing I struggle to project my own human impressions, experiences and imagination. I hope that those who view my images are able to experience the same sense of adventure, mystery, drama, exploration and beauty that I do when I am out in the world.

Photography has entered a new and exciting era. Early on I embraced the changes digital technology brought to the art form. The digital age has allowed photographers to overcome many shortcomings and limitations of cameras that have frustrated them from the beginning. It is an exciting time to be a landscape artist. The new tools of photography enable me to be more creative and to express my experiences and vision more fully than ever before.

For those wondering if digital cameras have lowered the bar in photography, I can say my experience has been just the opposite. All the principles of light and composition continue to apply and proper camera technique is still essential. In fact, the way that I work with the camera in the field these days is more involved and creative than it ever was or could have been with film. I shoot thinking several steps ahead to how I will want to develop the image later on. In just a few seconds I might capture a range of frames utilizing different exposures, apertures and focal points in order to collect all the visual information in the scene I’ll need to develop the finished piece. Learning how to think and work with so many variables while simultaneously pre-visualizing the future processing has been far more interesting and challenging than working within the confines of a single frame of film ever was. Far from being a shortcut and creativity killer, digital photography allows us to express a new and exciting vision, not unlike the way film photography did when it was introduced over a century ago.

Filed Under: Photography Journal Tagged With: digital photography, digital workflow, fine art photography, landscape photography, oregon photographer

March Show At Illahe Gallery – Earth Palette

February 25, 2011 by Sean Bagshaw 10 Comments

March Show At Illahe Gallery – Earth Palette

Last summer I had a private exhibit of my latest photography show entitled Earth Palette in the gallery at Rogue Valley Manor. I am excited to invite you to attend the opening of the first public showing of this body of work. The show will be featured at Illahe Gallery in Ashland, Oregon opening on Friday, March 4, 2011 from 5 to 8 PM.

Illahe Studios and Gallery is located on the corner of 4th and B Street in Ashland. The show will be on exhibit for the entire month of March so if you miss the opening stop by any time.

The show consists of a series of my landscape and nature images from locations in the western US that all share a focus on color, light, texture and form. The title of the show, Earth Palette, comes from my experiences photographing in the Painted Hills of central Oregon. The images are vibrant, surreal, dramatic and perhaps in many ways represent my romantic impressions more than a literal representation of the world.
In keeping with my ongoing interest in moving beyond the traditional in landscape photography, I have created this entire show on a medium that is somewhat new to the art form, namely canvas. All of the images in this show have been printed in large format, some as large as 60 x 40, on gallery wrapped canvas. This gives them a painterly quality very different from what we usually expect from photographs. It is also a more raw and simple presentation, allowing one to view the images without competition from frames or separated by a layer of glass.

I hope to see you there!

Filed Under: Past Events Tagged With: fine art photography, landscape photography, nature photography, photography exhibit, sean bagshaw photography

Exploring Hart Mountain Wildlife Refuge In Winter

February 23, 2011 by Sean Bagshaw 2 Comments

Exploring Hart Mountain Wildlife Refuge In Winter

Admittedly, winter is not my most prolific photography season. Cold, darkness and unpredictable weather often get the better of my psyche and I find myself making excuses or prioritizing office work. However, once or twice a winter I do manage to gear up and head someplace windswept and snowy with my camera. This winter Chuck Porter, one of my oldest and best friends, and I spent a couple days exploring the lonesome high desert in the Hart Mountain Antelope Refuge. Back when we were more energetic Chuck and I spent a lot of time climbing cliffs and mountains all over the western US and spurring each other on to complete questionable feats of endurance. Once we hiked the entire length of the Wild and Scenic Rogue River Trail, all 40 plus miles, in a day. Another time we climbed Mt. Shasta, Mt. McLoughlin and Mt. Thielsen in a 21 hour push. These days we are happy just to get out and camp for a weekend and do a little ski touring.

Hart Mountain National Antelope Refuge is a national wildlife refuge on Hart Mountain in southeastern Oregon, which protects more than 422 square miles and more than 300 species of wildlife, including pronghorn antelope, bighorn sheep, mule deer, sage grouse, and redband trout. The refuge, created in 1936 as a range for remnant herds of pronghorn antelope, spans habitats ranging from high desert to shallow playa lakes, and is among the largest wildlife habitats containing no domestic livestock. Located in a remote region of southeastern Oregon at an elevation over 6,000 feet, Hart Mountain is a wild and desolate place any time of year. In winter, blanketed by snow, it becomes a quite and seemingly endless surreal landscape.

During our visit, Chuck and I skied through a couple of different areas, both very small in the total scale of the refuge. We talked about coming back one winter and skiing all the way across, but we’ll see if I ever get the winter motivation to take that on. The two areas we explored on this visit were the hot springs basin below Warner Peak and Petroglyph Lake. Petroglyph Lake is sheltered on one side by a low cliff band that houses several panels of Native American rock art.

Instead of going on at length about the skiing, sleeping in the car, eating bad food and all the other standard tales from a trip like this I’ll just let the photos speak for themselves. You can click on each image to see it larger and then hit the back button to return to the article.

Hart Mountain rising out of the clouds above Hart Lake.

Old building at park headquaters.

Winter Landscape

Rok Chuk

Hotsprings basin black and white

Meandering hotsprings stream

Skiing toward Petroglyph Lake

Desolate and windswept

Warner Peak above the high desert plain

Skiing around Petroglyph Lake

Petroglyphs

Petroglyphs

Petroglyphs

Wind sculpted snow

Skiing in a snow shower

Filed Under: Adventure Journal, Photography Journal, Photography Travel Journal Tagged With: landscape, landscape photography, nature photography, oregon photographer, Oregon Photography, outdoor photography, sean bagshaw, travel photography

My Favorite Images From 2010

January 3, 2011 by Sean Bagshaw 25 Comments

My Favorite Images From 2010

Despite their ubiquity this time of year, I always look forward to year end reviews in which we, as a society, look back at the previous year and what came of it. There is something intrinsically valuable about the practice of remembering the year gone, both personally and as a community. I appreciate the sense of closure it gives; a sort of taking stock and clearing of the air, a brief pause before barreling toward the future again. We do this for all aspects of life. The media loves to inundate us with lists and images recalling the year in politics, movies, economics, environmental crises and sport. Many of us take stock of what our personal lives brought in the past year as well.

Like many of my photographer colleagues, much of my year is wrapped up in the places I traveled and the photographs I made. Much effort and time is spent in pursuit of those few defining images that rise above the rest. They alone tell the story of my success or failure to communicate the vision I strive to capture and share. Despite success or failure, it is really about going for the ride. Whatever the outcome I take heart in adding another year to my photography story.

With those thoughts in mind I share some of my favorite images taken in 2010. Enjoy.

Camino de Oro
Camino de Oro, Guanajuato, Mexico

Lost In A Winter Forest, Crater Lake, Oregon

Copper Coast, Puerto Escondido, Mexico

Shasta Lavender, California

Sparks Lake Columbine, Oregon

Twilight Grove, Redwood National Park, California

Unforgettable Fire, Cascade Pass, Washington

Mineral de Pozos Doorways, Mexico

Teardrop Of Sky, Bandon, Oregon

Starvation Creek, Columbia Gorge, Oregon

Thanks for looking. I’d love to read any comments questions you might like to share, so please post those below. If you’re feeling it, please share this blog on your social media site of choice. Here’s to 2011!

Filed Under: Featured Photos, Newest Fine Art Prints, Photography Journal Tagged With: fine art photography, landscape photography, nature photography, southern oregon photographer

SOPA Presentation, May 11

April 28, 2010 by Sean Bagshaw Leave a Comment

SOPA Presentation, May 11

Puerto Escondido Lighthouse

On Tuesday, May 11 at 7:00 pm I will be giving a slide presentation to the Southern Oregon Photographic Association. In images and words, I will share a retrospective of my year in photography. Since last spring I have had some wonderful adventures with my camera including photographing locations in the Columbia Gorge, the Oregon Cascades, Lassen Volcanic National Park, the Utah desert, the Oregon coast, Mexican mining towns and beaches and many great spots right here in the Rogue Valley. In addition to sharing some of my photographic vision of the natural world, I will also tell some tall travel tales and discuss some of the techniques I use to create my images. Call Terry Tuttle at 541-779-3396 or go to www.sopacameraclub.org for information.

Filed Under: Past Events Tagged With: landscape photography, nature photography, outdoor photography, photography

Finally Some New Images On The Site

December 10, 2009 by Sean Bagshaw Leave a Comment

Finally Some New Images On The Site

I really enjoy almost every aspect of the work I do. Going out in search of light and visually enticing scenes to photograph takes effort, but it is also good fun and a worthy challenge. The countless hours I spend painstakingly guiding each image through my workflow, applying the processing and developing skills I have learned over the last decade is also quite enjoyable and rewarding too. So is producing prints, and sharing my images with others on various websites, in publicatons and at galleries and exhibits. However, I have to admit that the tide of progress often stops flowing when it comes time to introduce new images on my own website. We all have portions of our work that is less engaging and more tedious than others. The process of putting new images on my site, which is the way that I share them with my largest audience, requires several layers of work I don’t particularly look forward to.

I’ll spare you all the details, but in brief it requires renumbering all the images to be uploaded, creating web sized images and thumbnails for each image, giving each image a title, keywords, caption and the organizing it into various departments and categories within the structure of my site. Once all the data entry is complete the database is uploaded to the software that uses the information to create the web pages and link structure for the new content. Any mistakes or typos cause havoc on my site, so I have to look carefully for bugs, repair them in the database and then allow the software to build the site again. Depending on how many images there are, the entire process can take me as much as a week.

Needless to say, this chore often slips off the top of my to do list to make way for more engaging or more pressing business. It has been nearly eight months since I last added new images to www.OutdoorExposurePhoto.com but I finally got it done. The good news is that there is now a large collection of new work created in the last year up on my site just waiting to meet the public. If you are keen to take a look at the photography I’ve been up to I invite you to take a look at my latest additions.


I wonder when I’ll catch up with the hundreds of stock images still waiting for their turn to see the light of day?

Filed Under: Newest Fine Art Prints Tagged With: landscape photography, new images, new work, outdoor photography, recent work, recently added photography, sean, sean bagshaw photography, southern, southern oregon photographer

Pacific Northwest Photography Podcast Interview

December 7, 2009 by Sean Bagshaw Leave a Comment

Pacific Northwest Photography Podcast Interview

Talented outdoor photographer, Adrian Klein, is now producing a great podcast called Pacific Northwest Photography. Adrian recently interviewed me for his podcast, which you can listen to on the player above. During our conversation we chatted about favorite locations, adventures and photography equipment. I also give the behind the scenes tales of the two images below. You can also get the complete story behind my intolerance of goat flavored food products.

I highly recommend checking out Adrian’s photography at www.adrianklein.com

and his photography blog at http://adriankleinphoto.blogspot.com/

On Adrian’s home page you can subscribe to his PNWP Podcast by clicking the red musical note.

Lunar Eclipse Over Mt. Shasta
Lunar Eclipse Over Mt. Shasta

Double Falls, Glacier National Park
Double Falls, Glacier National Park

Filed Under: Photography Journal Tagged With: digital photography, landscape photography, nature photography, northwest photography, oregon photographer, outdoor photography, photography interview, photography podcast, photography techniques, professional photographer, sean bagshaw, southern oregon photographer

Intimate Painted Hills

August 25, 2009 by Sean Bagshaw Leave a Comment

Intimate Painted Hills

Intimate Painted Hills
Intimate Painted Hills

The painted hills in central Oregon is one of my favorite places in the state. The Painted Hills are located in the Painted Hills Unit of the John Day Fossil Beds National Monument along Hwy 26 just west of Mitchell. Even though the hills don’t cover much area, the patterns and shapes and the way light plays across them is visually absorbing. I often take wide landscapes, but for this image I decided to zoom in for an intimate and abstract study. When photographed like this, the hills really do look painted…or rather, they create a photograph that looks like a painting. I’ll have to print this large on canvas and see how it looks.

Filed Under: Featured Photo, Photography Journal, Photography Travel Journal Tagged With: abstract photography, intimate landscape, john day fossil beds, landscape photography, painted hills, sean bagshaw, southern oregon photographer

Blue October Sea

November 19, 2008 by Sean Bagshaw 1 Comment

Blue October Sea

From a trip to the southern Oregon coast with a group of Ashland photographers a couple of weeks ago. I liked the barnacle patterns on this rock and spent some time working on longer exposures to capture some wave motion for an interesting middle ground. As many of us who like to capture wave motion in our ocean photos well know, it is hard to get in the right position and still stay dry. I ended up stranded on this rock for several wave cycles until the surf went back out enough for me to wade to shore…the surf here wasn’t dangerous, just wet.

On the hike back to the car a woman approached me on the beach and said, “are you Sean Bagshaw?” I immediately wondered what I was in trouble for. It turns out she was with someone in the group. I had wandered off for quite a while and they were ready to go. Since she was walking my way they asked her to have me get a move on. Apparently they had told her I would be easy to spot because I would be carrying a tripod and most likely be wet up to the waist. I hate being so predictable.

Canon 5D, 16-35mm f/2.8 L @ 28mm, 2 sec @ f/18 and ISO 50, 3 stop ND filter for longer exposure time.

Filed Under: Featured Photo, Photography Journal Tagged With: bandon, Bandon Photography, beach, coast, landscape photography, ocean, Oregon, Oregon Coast Photographer, Oregon Coast Photography, pacific, photography, Sea Stacks, sean bagshaw, surf, waves

Red Willow Sea Wins in the ICP Awards

September 19, 2008 by Sean Bagshaw Leave a Comment

Red Willow Sea Wins in the ICP Awards
Red Willow Sea

Two of my prints were juried in to the International Conservation Photography Awards exhibit this year. Red Willow Sea was the winning image in the Flora category and Lunar Eclipse Over Mt. Shasta was also accepted in the highly competitive Landscape category.

Lunar Eclipse

The International Conservation Photography Awards (ICP Awards), is a premier worldwide photography event. The biennial juried photo competition includes an online exhibit, a six week museum gallery show at the Museum of History and Industry in Seattle, Washington, and publication in a prestigious photography magazine. The selected prints celebrate the world’s diversity along with the creativity and originality of photographers.

Known for his passionate advocacy of the environment, world renowned nature photographer Art Wolfe created a conservation-themed photo contest in 1997 as “an event for the advancement of photogaphy as a unique medium, capable of bringing awareness and preservation to our environment through art.” The 2008 International Conservation Photography Awards is the latest incarnation of Art Wolfe’s vision. The ICP Awards is a biennial (every two years) community event involving foundations, sponsors, politicians, and photographers to promote environmental and cultural conservation.

Filed Under: Photography Journal Tagged With: Art Wolfe, International Conservation Photography Awards, landscape photography, lunar eclipse photography, Museum of History and Industry, nature photography, Seattle Photography Exhibit, southern oregon photographer

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