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Tetons

Aperture Nature Workshop (Jackson Hole) Day Two

by admin on September 26, 2008

The ANPW Contest Winners

Photo and Article by Lisa Bettany

R-L: Richard Rothstein, Rob Trueman, Catherine Chung, & Bryan Mayler.

The contest winners were up bright-eyed and bushy tailed this morning at 5am, hoping to catch a beautiful dawn in Grand Teton National Park. The actual workshop *learning Aperture* was to begin later, but at first light, the students split up into two groups to take some pictures.

The first group went 30 minutes down the road to Schwabacher Landing and the Mormon Row Barns, and the others heading out a little further to the iconic Oxbow Bend. I trucked it to Oxbow Bend with Richard and Bryan. Everyone came prepared for the cold, except Steve, who was a bit whiny and runny nosed from the early morning and frosty temperature.:)

Scotty was determined to get a great shot, so we headed down this step muddy hill to the bank of Snake River. And then we set up our tripods half on the muddy bank, half in the water, and pointed our lenses towards the iconic view and waited. And waited. No interesting light seemed to be happening on Mt. Moran, but suddenly a slight mist of fog started floating just above the water line behind us. As the fog began to roll, Scott jumped and “yahooed” and turned his camera in the other direction and started shooting the silhouetted trees against the wispy, pink sky.
Oxbow Bend foggy at dawn, Grand Tetons

Everyone was carefully switching lenses near the water, and Scotty reminded us to always keep one hand on your tripod near water. He has tragically lost two cameras in the water, so let him be the lesson for all of us.

Catherine and Rob went to Schwabacher Landing, but immediately left when no clouds were present, creating little opportunity for dynamic shots. They headed up the road past the landing at Teton Overlook and grabbed some amazing panoramic shots of the Southern Tetons. Rob disappeared from the group for a while and ran into a one horned elk. And all that happened before 9:30 am.

After breakfast, the workshop got in full gear at the beautiful Jackson Arts center where an Apple Aperture Guru blew our minds with the dynamic power of Aperture software. We imported our images, learned how to compare and select our favorites, and generally found out that Aperture can do most of the things we used to do in Photoshop.

We are learning more advanced techniques tomorrow. I can’t wait. I’ll do a dedicated post on Aperture in the next few days. Right now I just need my mind to rest and catch a few hours sleep before tomorrow’s exciting activities.

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Aperture Nature Workshop (Jackson Hole) Day One

by admin on September 25, 2008

Schwabacher landing, Grand Teton National Park

Photo and article by Lisa Bettany

Yesterday I arrived in the small Moutnain Resort town of Jackson Hole, Wyoming. I couldn’t help “oohing” and “ahhing” at the spectacular view of the mountains, winding rivers, and the gorgeous colours of the changing leaves as the plane descended over the Grand Tetons.

Scott was worried that we might miss the the fall colours, but he couldn’t have picked a better week. The weather is perfect, the colours are spectacular and the wildlife is abundant — in fact just after arriving we saw a huge herd of Bison saunter across the road, munch on some grass, and then cross back over to the same spot they came from. Scott amused us by vocalizing the inner dialogue of a massive, sleepy looking guy. I believe his name was “Wilber”.

Since my arrival, Scott Bourne and I have headed out on a sunset scouting mission at Oxbow Bend and a dawn shoot at Schwabacher landing. I’m not gonna lie. Dawn is freezing and early. Today it was around 25°F (-4°C) and I was way underdressed. Even with three layers I was c-c-c-cold. Scott loaned me a jacket and gave me these little heat packs that I put in my gloves which helped a lot.

After the sun came up, we scouted the Mormon Row barns that are surrounded by tall grass and slender birch trees and framed by the Tetons. Brilliant.

I have to admit, I have never shot any nature this iconic, and it is a bit daunting trying to take a great and unique shot of something that has been photographed a million times. As a beginning nature photographer, my main goal is just to soak up as much knowledge from the pros as possible and try to do these impressive landscapes justice.

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ANPW Winner Rob Trueman

by admin on September 18, 2008

(EDITOR’S NOTE: Fashion model turned photographer Lisa Bettany joins the crew here at ANPW to report on our first expedition to the Tetons. Her first post is a short bio on ANPW contest winner, Rob Trueman.)

Meet the ANPW Winners: Rob Trueman

Rob Trueman from Harleysville, PA (a suburb of Philadelphia) took first prize with his stunning photo of Oxbow Bend in the Grand Teton National Park which is coincidentally where we are going!

So Rob, tell us a little bit about your photography. What’s your focus? What do you love to shoot? What’s your experience shooting landscapes and nature?

I shoot a lot of different stuff from wildlife and landscapes to portraits and corporate work. I love being out in nature so I’m most drawn to landscapes and wildlife. A year ago, I shot Yellowstone and the Tetons with a group from Nikonians.com. It was a fantastic experience making friends lasting a lifetime.

What do you hope to gain from the trip?

I hope to gain contacts and experience. Learning from the best is exciting! Being able to shoot with people whose work you admire is exciting and intimidating.

Awesome. Now let’s get geeky and talk gear! What camera gear are you bringing to the ANPW?

Nikon D300
Nikon D200
Nikon 17-55mm f2.8
Nikon 60mm f2.8 micro
Nikon 70-200 f2.8 VR
Nikon 50mm f1.8
Tamron 90mm f2.8 Macro
Nikon 300mm f2.8 (rented for only $125 for the week!)
Nikon 1.7x teleconverter (rented for only $25 for the week!)

Gitzo Carbon Fiber tripod
Markin M20 ball head
77mm Circular polarizer
Various cleaning stuff
Batteries and chargers

Sony laptop (alas… Vista! I wonder if Scott will allow it!)
External storage

Wow! That certainly is a lot of sweet gadgetry! Certainly pwns me! Except Vista… that evens us out :p

You can see more of Rob’s photo on his online photo gallery, or read about all of his adventures on his blog.

You can see all the winning photographs on the ANPW Photrade site.

Stay tuned for an introduction to another one of our contest winners, Richard Rothstein.

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