Sean Bagshaw Outdoor Exposure Photography

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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

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

Blurred Water Effect

October 19, 2009 by Sean Bagshaw Leave a Comment

Blurred Water Effect

I recently had a question from a photographer about achieving the classic blurred water effect that many landscape photographers use during full daylight. The blurry water effect comes from using a long shutter speed (.5 sec to 10 sec depending on speed of water) to allow the motion of the water to appear smooth.  In low light situations it can be easy, and sometimes unavoidable, to get a long enough shutter speed without any assistance. When more exposure time is needed also make sure you are using a tight aperture (f/22+) to let in less light and a low ISO (50-100) to decrease your camera’s sensitivity to light. In slightly brighter conditions a polarizing filter, which holds back about 1 stop of light, can help give a long enough shutter speed to get blurry water. In brighter daylight conditions you might also need to use a neutral density (ND) filter, or combinations of ND filters, to block some light (3 stop up to 10 stops depending on how bright it is) and give you a slower shutter speed. Singh-Ray and other filter makers also have variable ND filters that allow you to “dial in” the amount of filtration you need.0383912-20090722-Edit

Filed Under: Digital Photography Tips, Photography Journal Tagged With: blurred water technique, neutral density filter for longer exposure, photography how to, photography techniques, photography tips, sean bagshaw photography, smooth water technique, 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

Jefferson Wilderness, Jewel of the Oregon Cascades

August 4, 2009 by Sean Bagshaw 2 Comments

Jefferson Wilderness, Jewel of the Oregon Cascades

The Jefferson Wilderness in the Oregon Cascades, located to the north of Santiam Pass, east of Salem and West of Sisters, is one of the most amazing natural mountain environments on the west coast. Mt. Jefferson itself is awe inspiring as the second highest peak in Oregon and host to the largest glaciers in the state other than those found on Mt. Hood.

Warm sunset light on Mt. Jefferson and Bays Lake
Warm sunset light on Mt. Jefferson and Bays Lake

In days past I have trekked into Jefferson Wilderness on several occasions, either backpacking or to climb Three Fingered Jack or Mt. Jefferson itself. This was my first time to visit specifically to take photographs. The wilderness is home to some extremely photogenic countryside. For the dedicated photographer willing to backpack in with camera gear and spend a couple days exploring it is a wonderland.

In July I spent a memorable week with fellow photographer, David Cobb (www.dmcobbphoto.com), photographing in two different parts of the wilderness area.

Mt. Jefferson reflected in Rock Lake
Mt. Jefferson reflected in Rock Lake

First, we backpacked in to the popular Jefferson Park area via the Woodpecker Ridge Trail which is accessed by a forest road (road 040) a few miles to the east of the town of Detroit. Jefferson Park can be overcrowded on weekends in August, but midweek in July, when there is still quite a bit of snow on the ground and the mosquitoes are at their peak, we only saw three or four other parties in three days. Jefferson Park is popular for a reason. The flat alpine basin at over 6,000 feet of elevation has several lakes and numerous small tarns that reflect some of the best views of the mountain available. As the snow melts wildflowers carpet the marshy meadows. The position of the Jefferson Park area on the north side of the mountain means that in summer the peak gets great side light for photography at both sunrise and sunset.

Snow filled tarn in Jefferson Park
Snow filled tarn in Jefferson Park

After three days on the north side of the wilderness we hiked out, drove over Santiam Pass and down the east side of the cascades where we drove along more forest roads (road 12 to 1230 to 1234) to reach the Canyon Creek trail head. The Canyon Creek trail starts at Jack Lake ascends toward Canyon Creek eventually arriving at Canyon Creek Meadow at the base of the north east side of Three Fingered Jack. Three Fingered Jack isn’t the highest of the Oregon Cascades, but it is one of the cragiest with the most interesting geologic patterns of colors and layering. Canyon Creek Meadow is located in a glacier carved basin directly at the base of the sheer north face of Three Fingered Jack. In late July it is home to one of the most amazing wildflower blooms in the state. We were a week or two too early for the peak of the flowers, so I look forward to getting the timing better next year. Even still the early morning light on the peak with winding streams, reflecting pools and green meadows below made it one of the more memorable campsites and photography locations I have had. A high ridge blocks the late evening light, so we cooked dinner and hid from the voracious mosquitos in the tent. However, the morning light is sublime. We spent over an hour finding one composition after another as the warm glow of the rising sun slowly progressed down the mountain face.

Paint brush in Canyon Creek Meadow below Three Fingered Jack
Paint brush in Canyon Creek Meadow below Three Fingered Jack

Greg Vaughn gives good directions and photography suggestions for both these locations in his book Photographing Oregon.

Three Fingered reflection
Three Fingered reflection

Filed Under: Featured Photos, Photography Journal Tagged With: canyon creek meadow photography, cascade range wilderness, Jefferson Wilderness, oregon photographer, photographing mt. jefferson, photographing three fingered jack, photography by sean bagshaw, photography in jefferson park, photography in the jefferson wilderness, southern oregon photographer, wilderness areas in oregon

The Difference Light Makes

June 26, 2009 by Sean Bagshaw Leave a Comment

The Difference Light Makes

Howard Prairie lupine right before sunrise.
Howard Prairie lupine right before sunrise.
Howard Prairie lupine at sunrise
Howard Prairie lupine at sunrise

For me, as for many photographers, light is the most important element in any photograph. Take these two photos for example. They were taken minutes appart during the June wildflower bloom in Howard Prairie in the southern Oregon Cascades. I like both, and other than the light, both are very similar. However, in the first image the sun has not yet crested the ridgeline so the scene is lit by indirect light that is being reflected from the sky and off of the surrounding landscape. It creates a very even wash of light with subtle transitions from darker to lighter areas and the feel that light is glowing from all directions, which it basically is. In the second image the sun has just crested the ridge and direct light is shining on the meadow and strongly backlighting the flowers and grass. The color is warmer, the contrast in the scene is much greater and there is a much stronger sense of the direction of the light. Knowing the characterisitics of different types of outdoor lighting situations helps me be to plan the timing of a photo to best convey the scene the way I envision it.

Filed Under: Digital Photography Tips, Photography Journal Tagged With: natural lighting, outdoor lighting, photography tip, sean bagshaw, southern oregon photographer, the difference light makes in a photograph, using natural light in photography

Outdoor Exposure iPhone App

April 1, 2009 by Sean Bagshaw 5 Comments

Outdoor Exposure iPhone App

Outdoor Exposure for iEnvision iPhone app

While a fine art photographic print is still my favorite way to enjoy great photography, technology is rapidly changing the ways it is possible to view, access and share art. The images that move and excite us no longer have to be confined to a wall or the pages of a book. I love to share my photographs and want people to be able to access them in a way that best suits their needs and purpose. A large fine art print will always be available to those who have the resources and space, but size, cost and location are no longer limiting factors to accessing photography and other visual art.

The iPhone is one of the most innovative pieces of technology to recently come on the scene. It can be very valuable as a tool for communication and storing and accessing information, but it also has great potential in entertainment, education and access to media and imagry, includinig art.

iPhone app graphic

I recently partnered with the folks at Open Door Network in creating an iPhone application of my photography. The application is like a collection of slide shows that allow iPhone users to have a portable art gallery of my photographs right in their pockets. Photographs in the Outdoor Exposure for iEnvision app are organized into three collections including Landscape, Nature and Travel. Landscape includes photos of canyons, deserts, forest, lakes, mountains, oceans, streams and waterfalls. Nature displays abstracts, fall color, flowers, trees and winter. Travel takes you to Hawaii, Mexico and Nepal.

iPhone app graphic

In addition to viewing the gallery shows, the images can also be saved for use as iPhone wallpaper and each image links to the Outdoor Exposure Photography website for more information.

iPhone app graphic

Open Door Network’s flagship iEnvision web image browser, as well as their line of Envi iPhone image applications access and organize images from the Web into fun to view and share slide shows for the iPhone. Other iEnvision “Envi” apps include Art, Earth, Space, Mountain and Yosemite.

Filed Under: Past Events, Photography Business Tagged With: app, Apple, application, fine art photography, iPhone, iPhone slide show, iPhone wall paper app, iTunes Store, outdoor exposure photography, photo, photography, photography on the iPhone, photos, sean bagshaw, slide show, southern oregon photographer

Presentation: Climbing Denali

March 2, 2009 by Sean Bagshaw 3 Comments

Presentation: Climbing Denali

denali
Gripped perpetually by subfreezing temperatures and cloaked by five massive glaciers, the world famous mountain known as Denali (“the Great One”) beckons intrepid mountaineers from around the world. With a summit peak that is 20,320 feet above sea level, Denali (also known as Mount McKinley) is the highest peak in North America. An aspect that is painfully evident to climbers is that the peak rises 18,000 feet from its base (which is 6,000 feet more than Everest rises above its base, the Tibetan Plateau). There is also a higher risk of altitude illness for climbers than its altitude would otherwise suggest, due to its high latitude. It all adds up to a long and merciless climb to reach the summit, where climbers can encounter temperatures as low as -100 degrees below freezing.

So, you might ask, “What’s the big attraction?” I’ll be answering that questions and others as I present my multi-media program, “Above The Shadow Lands“ on Wednesday evening, March 4th, at The Stage Door Coffee House in Mt. Shasta. The presentation will focus on the story of my second ascent of the mountain in 2005.

walk-in-the-clouds

In 1998 I climbed Denali as part of a six person team. It was a great adventure, but we had a few difficulties. The size of the group was a challenge and the weather kept us on the mountain for three weeks. In 2005 I went back with my climbing partner, Brock. Better conditions, more experience and an efficient two person team made for smoother ascent. However, I still almost didn’t make it.

Climbing Denali is one of the hardest things I have ever done twice. The route we climbed isn’t particularly technical and I’m not a great climber. However, the mountain is big and cold. Setting the goal and then preparing for and experiencing everything it takes to live, survive and reach the summit in that harsh environment made it an enormously powerful and rewarding experience…both times.

This program is presented by the Mt. Shasta Trail Association. Admission is by donation at the door, and guests are encouraged to have dinner at The Stage Door previous to the program.

Stage Door Coffee House, 414 N. Mt. Shasta Blvd.
Wednesday evening, March 4th, 7pm.
More information: 926-5966

Filed Under: Past Events, Photography Business Tagged With: adventure, Alaska, climb, climbing, Climbing Denali, Climbing Mt. McKinley, mountaineering, Mt. Shasta Trail Association, multi media presentation, photography, sean bagshaw, southern oregon photographer

Photos On Exhibit in Ashland Starbucks

February 4, 2009 by Sean Bagshaw Leave a Comment

For anyone in southern Oregon who is interested in checking out some of my photography on display and/or is in need of a coffee fix, four of my large, framed fine art prints will be on exhibit in the south Ashland Starbucks from February through April. The images on exhibit are entitled Rogue Sunrise, Land of Fire, Future Forest and Lunar Eclipse Over Mt. Shasta. They are some of my most popular images and represent a good variety of my landscape photography.

Starbucks is a corporate member of the Ashland Artisan Gallery and Art center of which I am a member and resident artist. In addition to their main gallery, the Art Center currates art shows at various corporate member locations around Ashland. As a southern Oregon artist who photographs often in the Rogue Valley it is great to have the oportunity to share my work in the community at public venues such as Starbucks.

The south Ashland Starbucks is located at 1474 Siskiyou Blvd in Ashland, Oregon.

Filed Under: Past Events Tagged With: art at starbucks coffee, Ashland Oregon Art Exhibit, photography exhibit, photography show, photos on display, sean bagshaw photography, southern oregon photographer

In Search Of A Winter Full Moon Rise

January 16, 2009 by Sean Bagshaw Leave a Comment

In Search Of A Winter Full Moon Rise

Some friends and I skied out into the Siskiyou Mountain Range back country behind Mt. Ashland last weekend during the full moon. On cue, it rose directly over Mt. Ashland. As the moon was rising the light from the setting sun illuminated the sky to our east. By taking three images and stitching them together I was able to create a panorama showing Mt. McLoughlin, Pelican Butte, Brown Mountain and Mt. Ashland.

After the moon climbed up in the sky a bit I composed this next photo. My goal was to capture the amazing atmosphere, calmness and clarity of winter camping. I thought the headlamps in the tent and the moonlight on the snow really helped capture the mood. I put in a fair amount of Photoshop time blending multiple exposures to try to balance out all the various light sources (back lighting from moon, front lighting from the fading sunset glow, the moon itself and the light in the tent).

It is always fun on outdoor adventures to also take some photos of your buddies trying to look like hardened outdoorsmen.

Filed Under: Adventure Journal, Photography Journal Tagged With: back country skiing, night photography, outdoor adventure, panoramic photography, Siskiyou Mountain Range, snow camping, Southern Oregon, southern oregon photographer, southern oregon photography, winter snow camping

2008 Nature's Best Photography Exhibit Now Open at Smithsonian

December 5, 2008 by Sean Bagshaw 2 Comments

2008 Nature's Best Photography Exhibit Now Open at Smithsonian

My photograph Lunar Eclipse Over Mt. Shasta was recently named Best Creative Digital Photograph of 2008 by Nature’s Best Photography Windland Smith Rice International Awards. I’m excited to announce that It is now on exhibit at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History in Washington, DC from November 2008 through April 2009.

Out of 22,000 entries, award-winners were chosen in 19 categories. A selection of 40+ images are included in the exhibition of large-format prints accompanied by captions telling the stories behind the shots, as well as an HD video by the Discovery Channel. Through these photos, visitors will gain an appreciation for the wild through the art of nature photography.

This exhibition has been named in memory of Sandra Windland Smith Rice for her steadfast support of emerging photographers worldwide. She was a skilled nature photographer and a champion for wildlife around the world. She did work for National Geographic, Nature’s Best and Coldwater Creek and won many awards. Mrs. Rice served on Nature’s Best Foundation board and on the board for Earthfire Institute, an Idaho based nonprofit that provides safe homes for wildlife no longer able to survive in the wild.

See the Fall 2008 Special Collectors’ Edition of Nature’s Best Photography magazine for the complete catalog of 102 Winners and Highly Honored images from the 2008 contest. The winning images have also been featured on AOL, MSNBC and Pixcetera

Filed Under: Past Events, Photography Journal Tagged With: ashland photographer, competition, landscape photographer, lunar eclipse photography, nature's best magazine, nature's best photography, photography award, smithsonian national museum of natural history, southern oregon photographer, Windland Smith Rice Awards

On the Edge at Palouse Falls

November 26, 2008 by Sean Bagshaw Leave a Comment

On the Edge at Palouse Falls

At the beginning of October, David Cobb and I were returning from a productive ten day photo trip in Montana and Idaho. We decided to detour slightly for a final stop at Palouse Falls in eastern Washington. We took a 30 minute stop for lunch in Baker City, Oregon which caused us to miss the sunset at the falls. We arrived at the falls about 30 minutes after sunset thinking that we had missed our window. However, the final glow on the horizon before the scene went totally dark was amazing. The orange post sunset glow in the sky reflected nicely off the cliff walls creating a moody, alien scene.

Palouse Falls drops over 150 feet into the deep and winding Palouse River Canyon in eastern Washington. The landscape in this area, not far from the Snake River Canyon, was carved by the massive Misoula Floods created when an enourmous ice dam broke in Montana at the end of the last ice age. Taking this photo required positioning my tripod legs right on the edge of the 370 foot high canyon rim and fighting back sensations of vertigo while standing on tip toe to see through the viewfinder.

Canon 5D, 16-35mm f/2.8 L lens, circular polarizer, 3 stop GND, 30 seconds @ f/13

Filed Under: Photography Journal Tagged With: canyon, landscape, Palouse Falls, Palouse Region, photography, southern oregon photographer, southern oregon photography, sunset, Washington, waterfall

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

Featured Photo: Land of Pure Sunlight

June 10, 2008 by Sean Bagshaw 2 Comments

Featured Photo: Land of Pure Sunlight

land of pure sunlight

When I go out in search of colorful sunrises I am normally met by either complete cloud cover or complete blue sky (anyone else have that experience?). This photo falls into the latter category. However, the crystal clear spring air made for some great stretched out sunrise shadows and direct sun did a nice job of back lighting the new grass and blooming vetch. I like the drama that extreme lighting like this provides. There are a few strangely dark areas in the oak trees that are part of the original RAW files. There isn’t much data there, so I’m not sure how to deal with that.

Canon EOS 5D, Canon 16-35mm f/2.8L lens, ISO 100, f/18, two different exposures blended manually in Photoshop to contain the wide dynamic range between the sun and the foreground.

Filed Under: Featured Photo Tagged With: Featured Photo, landscape photography, nature photography, Photography Journal, southern oregon photographer, southern oregon photography

Featured Photo: Grove of Shadow and Light

June 3, 2008 by Sean Bagshaw Leave a Comment

Featured Photo: Grove of Shadow and Light
redwood grove

William Neil has been working on a series for the past couple of years he calls “Impressions of Light” or something like that. He is trying to create unusual, impressionistic and intriguing visions of common outdoor photography subjects, something I’m also interested in. He uses a variety of camera techniques, one of which being slow shutter speed panning and/or zooming. A couple months back he had an amazing image in Outdoor Photographer that he took in a Yosemite redwood grove. It really struck a chord with me. This is my own attempt at something similar. It falls far short of Neil’s, but I like how the motion blur smooths out much of the distracting background forest clutter while emphasizing the lines, texture and lighting of the trees themselves. All the blur is in camera. In Photoshop I created several layers that were copies of the background image and then experimented with different combinations of blending modes (multiply, overlay, soft light) to increase color density, contrast and general mood.

Filed Under: Featured Photo Tagged With: fine art photography, Photography Prints, photography technique, Redwood Forest Photography, Redwood Trees, southern oregon photographer, southern oregon photography, William Neil

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